My thoughts on this once some of you have replied, so my opinions do no swaying.

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Schadenfreude wrote:Not going to lie, if I found out that one of the seemingly illiterate morons we'd banned on the Raptors board was Primoz Brezec, it'd pretty much make my decade.
microfib4thewin wrote:1/5 like Magic.
Illuminati wrote:MagicNoles is a g. Don't bring beef and there ain't no beef.
mitchweber wrote:Ultimately, I think a tweener isn't truly effective as such unless he could consistently start at both positions on a legitimately contending team. Very, very few players in this league qualify at the forward spots, if any. The only that come close (off the top of my head) are Josh Smith, Odom, and maybe a couple others situationally. But I still really have serious doubts that anyone could do it.
microfib4thewin wrote:1/5 like Magic.
tkb wrote:mitchweber wrote:Ultimately, I think a tweener isn't truly effective as such unless he could consistently start at both positions on a legitimately contending team. Very, very few players in this league qualify at the forward spots, if any. The only that come close (off the top of my head) are Josh Smith, Odom, and maybe a couple others situationally. But I still really have serious doubts that anyone could do it.
I agree with the point in general, but I disagree about labeling guys like that as tweeners. In my opinion, if you can play one or more of the positions both ways (guys like Odom and Smith can), you're no longer a tweener.
RnB wrote:microfib4thewin wrote:1/5 like Magic.
Someone give this man a prize![]()
1/2 creates the least problems, guard play between the 1 and 2 has a much smaller difference gap than the 3/4 and 4/5. As stated beforehand 3/4 creates the most problems due to whats expected from small forwards (versatility) and powerforwards (postplay).