NBA4u wrote:When healthy, hes better than what most people give him credit for, he is a really good combo guard.
People thought Ty lawson was a really good combo guard, Eric, if healthy, is a better prime lawson.
Bledsoe has never shown the playmaking ability that Lawson displayed in his final two seasons in Denver. During his final two years as a Nugget, Lawson averaged 9.2 assists per game over 137 contests, including 9.6 assists in his last season in Denver with a spectacular 3.89:1.00 assists-to-turnover ratio. Although playmaking was not Lawson's initial strength in the NBA, he was always a true point guard in my opinion.
Lawson ranked third in the NBA in assists per game in each of his final two years as a Nugget, whereas Bledsoe has never averaged more than 6.1 assists per contest. His assists-to-turnover ratios have proved perennially awful for a starting point guard (never topping 1.80:1.00), as his decision-making and ability to command an offense have been in constant question. Although he can make some impressive passes due in part to his leaping ability, long arms, and strength (sort of like a mini-LeBron James), Bledsoe forces too many passes and plays, gets indecisively caught in the air too often, and fails to open passing lanes through ball fakes, head fakes, and eye fakes. Bledsoe frequently forces passes, telegraphs passes, and makes poor reads, and while very explosive, he fails to penetrate with the control and poise of Lawson.
Bledsoe is a somewhat better scorer than Lawson and obviously a much better defender, so one might still take him as the total player. But Bledsoe is not the guy that you want leading your offense; he fails to consistently make the game easier for his teammates, and he is not a noteworthy shooter, either (although he has become respectable in that realm). If you can consistently create offense from another "position," Bledsoe may be acceptable or attractive as your starting point guard, much as LeBron James' facilitating presence renders Kyrie Irving acceptable as a "point guard." But Bledsoe is not nearly a franchise point guard even when healthy, which has often not been the case due to periodic knee surgeries.