tontoz wrote:Upper Decker wrote:. the only real conclusion we can draw is how little depth this team has. If one of wall, nene, or beal are out the team is 5-32.
Yeah there is no margin for error with injuries. It isn't like the regular rotation guys are stars it is just that they have no replacements.
Sure. It also speaks to the fact that building a roster isn't JUST an exercise in collecting talent. Rather, the pieces have to fit together.
Take Steph Curry. He's a wonderful player. But you would never want to put 5 of him on the court together, right? You'd never stop anyone, you'd never get a rebound, you couldn't free any of your Curry clones with effective screens, etc.
Having players that do certain things will allows other players to focus on what they do well. It relates to Nivek's point of the importance of having players who play both ends of the floor -- after all, this isn't football were you get a break to put your defenders in. So with Nene creating, Okafor is freer to defend and rebound and pick his spots properly on offense. We all saw how lost he was at the start of the season without Nene and how ineffective he was trying to play outside his offensive limitations. Similarly with Ariza -- he's not finding himself with the ball in his hands late in the shot clock (unless he's set up for an open 3) close to as much, and he's not launching long fadeaway 2's with no shot of going in.
So yeah, this roster isn't deep with two-way talent. But I think we are seeing that all of the pieces fit together at least decently. Coach Wittman, to his credit, is playing the guys who are productive (and perhaps in the process shining a little light for ownership on how ineffective the bulk of the "young talent" EG acquired over the past few years is -- Seraphin and SIngleton had 15 minutes a piece last night and Steezus, Veseley and Booker got DNP's).