fatlever wrote:My concern with Lamb is that he's OK in a bunch of areas of the game, but not really above average in any of them. If you are above average in many areas you can get away with not having an area of specialty, but Lamb is not above average in any areas of the game. The best thing you can say about Lamb is that he is fairly efficient as a shooter/scorer. You'd like for your bench players to be able to come in and make an immediate impact in at least one area of the game - 3pt shooting, defense, rebounding, shot blocking, passing, ball handling etc. Lamb is an OK 3pt shooter, but not good enough to fill a role as a floor spacer. He is an OK defender, but not someone who can fill the role of a defensive stopper. He is an OK passer and ball handler, but not someone you would trust to run your offense through. He doesn't fill the role as a slasher who attacks the rim and gets to the FT line. And he's not quite a good enough scorer to fill the role as a microwave 6th man. Troy Daniels had passed Lamb towards the end of the year because he at least had a specific role as a 3pt shooter/floor spacer.
He reminds me a little bit of a better version of a former Bobcat named Derrick Brown. Brown, like Lamb, wasn't good enough to be a starter (except on the horrible 7-win Bobcats) and never found a role as a bench player because he was just OK at everything. I always said when Brown was in Charlotte that he needed to find his niche. What is Lamb's niche? He is not good enough to be a starter, so what role is he going to fill off the bench for the next 3 years? He has to find a role. Coaches aren't dying to play guys off the bench that have no role and are just OK at everything.
At least, that's how I see it.
Lamb needs to improve his 3pt shot or his ball handling/passing or his defense or grow some balls and start attacking the rim or else I suspect he'll just float around the league, in and out of lineups for the next 3 years.
is it better to be very good at something but bad at everything else (Daniels/3pt shooting) or ok at everything (Lamb) as a bench player? i think you need both to have a good bench, if you just have specialists the bench will have too many holes with each player just having one skill. if you have a bunch of ok all-around players on the bench, then they wont have "big game potential" like the specialists could have (like a 3pt shooter specialist getting hot and scoring 25 from nowhere or a rebounding specialist having 15 boards in 15mins etc.).
i would probably say a good rotation bench needs (just the guys that play, not the end of bench bums)
-a designated 6th man (a starting caliber player who plays on the bench, this player should be a scorer)
-2 all-around players (preferably a big and a wing/guard)
-2 specialists (who are at least passable at their non-specialist skills)
PG- 6th man
SG- all-around
SF- 3pt specialist
PF-all-around
C- defense/rebounding specialist