When there was nothing really wrong with Bynum in the regular season, Jackson still tried to hold him to fewer than 30 minutes per game ... just to minimize exposure to possible injury. Bynum is already and will continue to be extremely valuable, but you can't change the reality that he can never be a franchise player.
A true star doesn't just bring it at the highest level three out of four games, with the one clunker usually not even very loud. He is there every night for the fans to revere and the role players to surround. He is spectacular and dependable in a game Jackson notes fundamentally gives you "feet under feet and collisions."
Bynum has been playing so well that it drives people to imagine how dominant he'd be if he didn't have to defer so much to these other great Lakers. They speculate about how commanding he'd be if he had the same opportunities as Dwight Howard – overlooking that Howard has played 567 of 574 possible games in his NBA career. http://www.ocregister.com/sports/-297685--.html
Pretty slow day on the board. I read this article and thought I would share it.