JMac1 wrote:RunDogGun wrote:Well that will be a matter of opinion as to what we are looking for in a deep bench player. Alec did average two blocks a game in the DLeague, and we know he has range, so it might be worth signing, and keep him mainly in the DLeague to develop more of a game.
It has taken me a while, but I am learning to ignore opinions that I find ridiculous. The guy injured his shoulder and missed significant time.....supposedly he has gained weight and his D League coach said he looked really good, but hey you know the guys here were watching every game and knows what he brings inside and out
http://www.azcentral.com/story/sports/nba/suns/2015/07/07/alec-brown-ready-to-show-suns-that-he-can-play/29840593/I guess just you and I are willing to take a look without going in there expecting failure, thus seeing failure no matter what he does because we are looking to for it.
I don't give a crap what some young player has done in his first year, to go in there and not give the guy the benefit of the doubt that he has improved is absolutely insane and says a lot about a persons character.
Thank god, most of the posters in here are not high school coaches. I'd never want to play for them; I guess that's why I am a coach.....and a damn good one at that

I don't know how good of a coach I was, for anytime you are a coach and a teacher, you are bound to get a negative stigma, because you also assign homework. But I did find that I had many players improve greatly while I was their coach, so there is that. Plus I became such a better player after coaching and taking many coaches' clinics.
I've watched Brown a few times, and before his injury he moved very well for his size. He has a decent form in his shot, he just didn't seem to really work the transition from college three to pro three. But the mechanics are there. His defense wasn't horrible. He may be a bit thin (or was in last year's SL), so maybe he got pushed around a bit from bigger players. But overall, he does a good job with blocks, so there is some antisipation of shot release, and decent timing getting in position to make the block.
So what's not to like? Sure he is raw, but he has range, and blocks, and he has height. So he needs to work on rebounding and rebounding position. Work on boxing out, and work on defense with his feet. All of that is teachable/coachable. The shoulder injury is unfortunate. I have one currently, and my shot is wonky right now.
But if we are talking a third string PF/C, learning from Chandler, and we have the draft rights? I don't get the hate.