Ericb5 wrote:Negrodamus wrote:tk76 wrote:I see the analogy of AI and Barkley in that they were both unusual players for their size/position that you needed to work hard to build around. They were not the type that you could easily plug into any roster. They also had unique personalities that certainly effected their teams- sometimes for better and sometimes for worse.
This may be the case for every star, but Barkley and AI were extremes. While Erving was more of a prototypical wing for his era.
The case against it is that they were undersized players that had something to prove in order to make it in this league.
Simmons is a 6'11 point guard (that can't shoot) and plays like he knows he's an anomaly, so he coasts at times.
You are over thinking this.
Iverson and Barkley were HOF talents, and well worth every negative thing that you could say about them in comparison to NOT having them.
Both Iverson and Barkely could have won titles with better teammates in their primes.
If Simmons turns into one of them then that is a huge win for us.
Embiid is the bigger difference maker here anyway. If Barkley or Iverson in their primes played with Hakeem in his prime they would have won multiple titles.
Embiid can be that here with a little luck.
This can work, and pay off on a huge way.
Actually, I think you are under-thinking it and assuming that Simmons is a guaranteed superstar. If he is, then he's the right choice. But I'm not so sure he will end up that level of player.
My argument remains that you have to build around Simmons, regardless of how he ends up, where you can build with Ingram in almost any circumstance:
1. Simmons is an atypical type player who you will need to commit to building around (similar in that regard to AI and Barkley.)
2. If Simmons approaches his ceiling and is an AI/Barkley caliber player then he is totally worth building around.
3. If Simmons ends up closer to his floor (good but not a superstar) then the limitations he puts on your roster construction will make it harder to build a contender with him than Ingram, even if Ingram also only reached his floor. This is because Ingram won't limit your roster construction.
So in terms of ease in building a contender:
Ceiling Simmons > ceiling Ingram
Floor Ingram > floor Simmons... not in terms of player ability but in terms of ease of building a contender.
Simmons is the obvious choice if you think he will be a superstar. I really don't think that has been debated by anyone. But the real question is how confident are you that he ends up a superstar. Is he the guy you want to hitch your future to, because Simmons is the type of player that you have to commit to making the focal point of your offense.
Then again, if Embiid end up a healthy superstar, it gets even more complicated. A Simmons/Embiid P&R would be devastating.