montestewart wrote:dobrojim wrote:jeez, 3 games all year.
Really?
JJ, your tangent contains some truths. Prime Nash would do better, as would a bunch of others, but when you look at 2nd year PGs, I think it's a pretty short list that
clearly would have done
appreciably better under
similar circumstances.
Wall has flaws, and many of them are observed and commented on by Wall fans. His passive spectator mode drives me batty, as does some of his out of control drives, and his shot is what it is (maybe it will get better with practice) but he shouldn't try some of his shots and instead try to make something else happen, even on this lousy team.
It's easy for most of us long-time Wizards observers to see how this situation can improve. More and better shooters, a clear (and good) go to scorer, less selfish players, team stability, and Wall getting more experience, making more veteran decisions, and improving his shot could all contribute to his improved play.
Looking at the bright side, the Wizards have won nine times when Wall was not having a good game. I'm still amazed that they managed to beat Portland on the road with Wall getting only 29 points (10-14 FGs) and only 9 assists, while allowing Felton to go off for four points.
Thanks, Monte. I do appreciate posters who reply with reason and logic without resorting to immediate insults and personal attacks and if we had more of them (and we used to), this would be a better place for it. Much respect for the classy response.
I'd like to take a moment to refute a few of those points, because not surprisingly, I disagree.
This has nothing to do with
prime Nash. If today's 38 year old Steve Nash had been the PG of the Washington Wizards over the past week instead of Wall, we'd have won 4 of 5 since the trade. This is not some wild leap of faith this is just suggesting that smart PG play would have resulted in not-blowing 3 double digit leads.
The entire meme that other second year PGs wouldn't do better under similar circumstances is untrue when you actually look at it. Kyrie Irving, for example, has taken the Cavs from a .232 win% to a .370 win% in one year. The Jazz were .317 the year before Deron Williams and .500 in his rookie year and .622 in year 2. Chris Paul took NOLA from .220 to .463 in his rookie year, and the three other highest PERs on that team were David West, Speedy Claxton and Kirk Snyder. Derrick Rose improved the Bulls from .402 to .500 in his rookie season with basically the same roster. Brandon Jennings rookie year lifted the Bucks from .415 to .561.
And I just listed rookie seasons. So when you say it's a "pretty short list", I just listed almost 20% of the starting PGs in the NBA and I didn't bother mentioning Rubio (the Wolves are 3-6 since Rubio's injury) or Westbrook, players who obviously made a difference in their 1st/2nd years. Other top PGs had different career trajectories (Nash, Kidd, Rondo).
All of this "John Wall can't possibly be expected to do anything with this roster" is literally and provably nonsense. Notice that I didn't say he should make the team .500 or make the playoffs or anything, but the Wizards should be better with Wall than without. Except so far they aren't. The Wiz were .316 the year before Wall (and that included blowing a team up and a resulting 16 game losing streak) and with Wall the Wiz went down to .280 and now down to .224.
In fact, Wall missed 13 games last season in which the Wiz went 4-9. Uh, that comes out to .307 win%. You can make a very strong, fact filled argument that the Wizards are worse off with Wall than without him. The fact is, if Wall were anywhere close to the player he's made out to be, he would be able to single handedly get the Wizards to a .300 win%. I'm not setting the bar very high there either.
When you say things like "Wall needs to make more veteran plays", it can also be interpreted as Wall needs to learn how to be a PG and not an athlete. As Flip Saunders said himself, point guards aren't made they are delivered from heaven. He's going on 22 years old, some of the fundamentals that he doesn't have (i.e., using picks effectively, taking smart shots, getting hot teammates involved, game/clock management) are quite commonly mastered by high school and sometimes even junior varsity players. Wall can certainly improve on things but I don't ever see him becoming a franchise PG much less an all-star PG.
Believe me I wish it weren't so.