tamaraw08 wrote:fatlever wrote:exert from what i posted on hornets board
This is nothing new from nick. We all know he can have an outlier red hot shooting night from time to time. If you put the ball in his hands enough and give him enough shots he's occasionally going to have a game like this. Microwave scoring is what he does. But this only happens in a situation where the Lakers top three ball handlers and scores are out. There's no other situation where he gets this much usage. It's a great story for him. But barring an incredible barrage of injuries, he goes right back to his role of 10th to 12th man after this game.
Best case scenario is he's a dude that you throw in the game when you're down 15 hoping that he can randomly get hot and get you back in a game. Otherwise he's not really bringing enough to keep him on the floor.
he's not a plus defender
he's undersized for 2, cant play the 1
his first instinct is to always dribble/iso
he can get hot but needs usage
best case is he hones in on becoming a catch/shoot corner 3 guy or what i said, a microwave guy you turn to when you need a spark, then hope he gets hot.
he hustles and is likeable and he can get randomly hot from time to time...
Okay, so they waive this 21 year old kid who was giving them 13-14pts/game so..... they could trade for a 6-3 chucker who also is not an A+ defender giving them 16pts/game from Utah so they could pay him 19 Million dollars this year.
but okay that 2030 SRP addition must be worth it.

1. nsj Averaged 10 points a game last year. I assume by your "13 to 14 points per game" comment you're referring to post All Star break when the entire Hornets team, outside of Miles Bridges, was out injured. So yes, when nsj was leading the "Greensboro Swarm" AKA The Hornets post All Star break last year he did average 12 points a game on a very inefficient 38%fg/34%3pt on 21% usage, While doing basically little else on the offensive end and being an all around minus defender. So none of that contradicts my point that if given a high usage role as a primary creator he is capable of having scoring outbursts, albeit rarely efficiently, up to this point.
2. nsj and sexton have very different roles with the Hornets with the latter mostly serving as Lamelo's back up. The Hornets have not had a serviceable backup point guard in several years, while at the same time having one of the most injury prone point guards in the league. And getting a veteran point guard behind Lamelo was a priority for the front office. And it's already needed since Lamelo is already missing games again with his Ankle. So it's apples to oranges. But even in the role of combo guard, there's a pretty big difference between Colin Sexton and nsj.
3. Paying Colin Sexton $19 million is irrelevant. It's not like we signed him to a contract in free agency. We traded a similar contract in nurkic for sexton. Either way we were on the hook for paying someone $19 million.
The Hornets had a roster crunch and had to cut some players. If anyone wants to point fingers at the Hornets for cutting someone they should have kept around it's Josh okogie who is starting for the Rockets. The Hornets drafted three rookies that would compete with nsj for minutes. Going into the season he was firmly behind: melo, miller, kon, sexton, mann, sion - As each of those six were either obviously better players, getting paid more or served a role that was more needed this season. then you add liam, kj simpson and josh green to the mix - A first round pick who the Hornets obviously want to get a look at, another vet defender who adds something that the Hornets needed more than another microwave combo guard And KJ Who has a specific role as a 3rd string point guard and who frankly was more needed. They also added Antonio Reeves as a two way another shooting guard who had some pretty good games with the Pelicans last year and is a better three point shooter. Bottom line, there simply was no path to playing time for him this year on the roster so the Hornets did him a solid and cut him To allow him to sign with another team.
There's no real hard feelings. It didn't work out for the Hornets but he's a very likable dude and if he improves his defense and becomes more consistent offensively he'll carve out a role. As crazy as it sounds there's a much better path for him to get consistent playing time with the Lakers than there was with the Hornets, just beat out bronny and knecht.