Dr Mufasa wrote:I'm not sure I understand the "I can see favoring a player because you think he'd be easier to build around even if that hasn't actually happened in his career" comment - the Nuggets put the right pieces around Melo for him, and had enough results with him in the lead to get nominated 20 spots ago. The Nuggets peak success was identical to the KG Wolves, Iverson Sixers, Allen Bucks, Kidd Nets, Paul Hornets, Deron Jazz, etc. among recent teams. It seems to me that sentence would be more applicable to Elton Brand who had a team that had no idea how to build around him and had virtually no results, or Bosh similarly
Melo was on a team that was basically a 1st round exit guarantee almost every year. I would take it as a given that there are well over 100 players who can lead a team to such middling levels when they have a team well build around him. If you then add in a supporting cast that for years and years has seemed to do about as well without him as is the case with Melo, it just doesn't seem like there's a whole lot there.
To me if you're talking about Melo as being someone who is easier to build around, and build around in the manner you described with big man defenders, etc, I just kind of assume you mean really building an elite team.
Dr Mufasa wrote:Re: The Nuggets trade. I actually like the Nuggets to be better than the Knicks this year... or almost anyone - but I think the situations for them succeeding with Melo and without him doesn't mean Melo's teammates were the ones making him succesful, y'know.
I don't think Melo's teammates made him successful so much as that there was a high degree of redundancy. What is redundancy in basketball? Multiple paths that similar in effectiveness. Melo to this point hasn't shown the ability to produced drastically more effective offensive paths which would result in team offense being so good WITH him that it would have to be worse without him.
Dr Mufasa wrote:To me last year's post Melo Nuggets were the deepest team in about a decade (going back to the Pippen era Trailblazers) and were also a freakish fastbreak/athleticism team, which is a combination perfect for Denver's altitude HCA and will be even more perfect in a compressed season, they're going to put every team on a back to back or playing their 4th/5th game of the last 7 days in a torture chamber. (though I wouldn't trust them nearly as much in the playoffs as the 09 and 10 w/ Melo Nuggets, you need halfcourt go tos and they won't have it and didn't against the Thunder). Whereas the Knicks have no depth in the season that's the worst for that fact and a coach who may have no idea what the right gameplan for this roster is, IMO pulling a Heat by slowing the pace to 0 and having everyone but Melo and Amare maximize their value by going all out defensively. If D'Antoni tries to run his Phoenix system at full pace without a guard who can pass/run the pick and roll and with no 3pt shooters and having no defensive coaching or system, and oh, plays a 7 man rotation in a compressed season, he's a moron who should lose his job. On that note, Carmelo's reputation will be completley destroyed if the Nuggets played at a 55 W pace and the Knicks were at 35-40, I might be on RealGM Iverson island with this guy by then by saying playing well without a star and with massive roster turnover does NOT diminish previous success
Interesting thoughts. Just moving on that tangent, there are so many teams this year that I have no good way to predict how they'll do. Nuggets are one of them. It's a bit better now that Nene's coming back, but they've still got 3 rotation players from last year trapped overseas this year, and I don't have confidence that I understand how THEY see their backcourt situation. I mean, glad they want Afflalo back, but presumably he's not going to be the one running the show. Who is? And how much confidence will Karl have in him?