bwgood77 wrote:lilfishi22 wrote:Because we have issues developing even one. Add another super raw prospect playing in that same position and we're not doing them or ourselves any favors. I've shown before that there's only been a handful of games where Bender/Chriss have played well in the same game. How many teams have had a good track record, let alone a track record of successfully developing two raw players in the same position?
I already went over examples of this about a week ago so I don't want to get into it again, but there are plenty of them. It will be a work in process and there is a good chance both don't succeed, but I don't think it will be because they both couldn't start or whatever. They will play some together and it may not look well, but that's because they are raw.
I don't buy into "what players show in show in their second year" as much as age...I think both play a factor, but these guys, if they are going to develop, will develop in practice and in the minutes they get. I've been impressed with some things I've seen and never felt "Man, I wish this other guy wasn't here because the other guy would look better".....now perhaps if Bender started sooner he would look even better now, but you never know...
I mean you could argue the same with TJ...he didn't have another SF drafted with him but couldn't start for a couple of years and played behind Tucker and is playing well now. Would he even be better had he started day 1? Maybe? But maybe not...maybe he plays worse and doesn't work as hard to earn his time.
I think competition is good....it should bring out the best in you...if it doesn't, then you don't belong in the NBA.
And of course, I'm also about positionless basketball and think both can play in the frontcourt in the future, particularly when Bender fills out...he can play C easily with his height.
I must've missed your examples but I'm curious to know what ones they are. Then of course what you've seen from the Suns that shows we can develop these two players properly.
When we had TJ, we were focusing on developing him at that SF position. We didn't need to develop PJ because he was who he was at that point. He's a veteran, he knew his role and played his game. We didn't so much need to worry about using development resources on him. Likewise with Booker, he was the only young guy at his position who needed to be developed. Knight had already been around for almost half a decade and didn't need development resources thrown at him.
Positionless basketball is not much use here when neither guys can play their own position well let alone another one.
dremill is totally right. Most players don't live up to their expectations and the reason my talent don't live up to their potential is because they can't put it together. Every NBA player has talent, only those who can translate that talent into production stick around. Archie is a great example, the guy was super talented and shown plenty of flashes of that talent but he was never able to put it together and prove he was an NBA player.