Nowak008 wrote:mattg wrote:I don't think wings are any less important than PGs if they are hypothetically the same talent level. The same standard that people use for big men(value bigs over smalls) applies to wings vs. PGs as well.
I'm glad PP is here to make my arguments for me:
paulpressey25 wrote:To add more color to the PG/C v wing debate, I guess I look at recent Bucks history.
Robinson and Allen never went anywhere until we got Brandon/Cassell in there at PG. Then the only other times we did ok were rookie TJ Ford. Good point guard play seemed to make or break this team.
At center, Bogut and last years version of Larry Sanders made this team .500 but in games they didn't play, we were awful.
The Center keys your defense. The PG keys your offense. The only exceptions are the top 25 all-time wings like mentioned (Jordan, LeBron, Kobe class players) who IMO really are PG's in most senses.
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I think achieving superstar status at the PG position is even more difficult to achieve than other positions because of the responsibilities of the position and because of the size of the players. i tend to agree with barkley when he says that on a championship contending team, the most dominant player on the team shouldn't be the PG. it's too difficult of a task to manage the responsibilities of a PG, being physically dominant at that size and carrying the scoring load. we've seen this in recent yrs in the playoffs to good effect, but opposing teams can and do go bigger on really good scoring PGs, lowering their effectiveness as scorers.
Basically, with the debate we're having here you guys are dead set on PG keying the offense, which I don't disagree with at all. My point is that compared to finding a playmaking wing, finding a good floor general is easy. Look how much better the bucks were with Nate wolters this year. Your PG doesn't have to be one of your best players, he just has to manage the game. And it's tough to find PGs who can do a great job mixing that responsibility with scoring and everything else. If I have the choice of an elite wing or PG, I'm taking the wing every single time and it's an easy call. Like has been mentioned, elite wings are going to be able to create and set other guys up, being able to act as a de facto PG at times. I can't imagine either of you would take a 6ft PG over 6'6 one all things being considered equal would you?
As for the bucks examples, I don't find their relevance. The bucks never had a playmaking wing in either situation mentioned. Of course they improved a bunch when you add a capable playmaker to a roster that doesn't have any playmakers. That's obvious.