Nuggetsfanduh98 wrote:As that has happended in the past I strogly disagree it will happen again the year the Nuggets appear ready to make deal and if they so happen to make the move it will be a move for Artest or Miller. Either way both improve both catagories. Ron is not a strong 3 point shooter at 34% but shoots alot of contested 3's in denver he will have many open loooks. He will help on the half-court offence in general becuase that's one more dynamic scorer the other team has to worry about along with Melo and AI as well as Kleiza if we go small ball. If we acquire Miller in a trade then he would Improve the 3 point shooting drastically I don't feel like I have to say anything about Mike Miller open for 3's but lighs out shooting. Also he has the reputation for being a great 3 point shooter so they cannot move we will say Carters man down down to DT Melo and becuase they know melo hits that outlet out to Miller for an open three more times than not its going in. No offence intended to carter but he can't shoot 2's that well much less 3's.
Denver's definitely not getting both Mike Miller and Ron Artest. That'd be incredible if so, but it's not realistic (maybe you weren't saying that).
They already lack the willing pieces for one of them. And specifically, their willing package of Najera/R1 pick for Artest isn't getting it done.
Nene healthy or not, is suspect at best if he's a relevant asset from either side in a deal. I'd guess not with things on both sides.
I watch the Kings, and Ron doesn't shoot
a lot of contested threes. That's just exaggerating. A good amount of them are decent-open looks. Mainly, he's not somebody who's going to come in and significantly improve a team's 3PT shooting. He's respectable, but not well above-average. Is a pretty clutch shooter, though.
The Nuggets do get more diverse offensively and better defensively with Ron, but they're still far too much of a perimeter-reliant basketball team. Then the accompanying factor of not being even an average 3PT shooting team.
Regardless of Artest, the defensive mind-set and consistency of the Nuggets has to change.
A team can't rely on forcing turnovers as the (defensively) main and a (offensively) main aspect of your team to be successful. Along with that, lacking control in going for those steals and blocks. Which consequently commonly creates issues with your defense, when the attempt for a steal or block is not successful.
Denver doesn't play the patterned kind of defense with regularity, and doesn't win games off that defense (not nearly enough).
Nuggetsfanduh98 wrote:You so quickly forget we have learned from the best the the last 2 years at putting a team out of the playoffs.(SA)
But are still the complete opposite of the Spurs. If the Nuggets would have learned from the Spurs, the philosophy and partly personnel, would be different. More tradtional.