BDM22 wrote:There are tons of guys around the league that are pylons on D, but play big roles on very good teams. Kyrie and Harden come to mind immediately.
Both are superstar offensive talents. Kennard is not in the same universe as either of them, nor does he have the tools to be.
The system plays more of a role than just surrounding one bad defender with a bunch of DPOY candidates. I also think he's far from a lost cause on that end. He has plenty of rookie lapses on that end, but he showed more solid defensive moments than I ever thought he would. He's not the next Bruce Bowen, but I think we've definitely got worse defenders on the roster.
He might someday be a borderline-acceptable defender. But he'll probably always be a liability in many matchups due purely to his physical limitations. The athletic standard in the NBA is ever higher, and athleticism ever more important. He's low on the scale. If he's ever to be a viable starter on the defensive end, he'll probably need to be surrounded with good defenders.
You also significantly ignore the effect of being deadly from just about anywhere on the court has on one's ability to create offense. Luke will never have to get to the rim and go over the top of bigs as a huge part of his offense, because he shoots better from mid-range than a lot of guys do right at the rim.
If he can't penetrate, he's of limited use. Simply put, that's the way of things. It's a necessary skill for complete scorers, beyond which it opens up the floor for other shooters. If the defense is aware that he cannot penetrate, they can plan accordingly.
For the record, his percentage this season from mid-range when he wasn't wide open was about 46%. That's not even remotely efficient, and it's far below what many players average at the rim.
He knows how to turn his outside threat and footwork into offense. It's clear as day to anyone who watches whenever he's not just forced to camp out in the corner.
He'll be a good scorer. But I think he'll always be somewhat one-dimensional. Being able to penetrate to the next is a gigantic asset without which no scorer is complete.
He's certainly the best option we've got next to Bullock right now. ESPECIALLY when you consider the fact that we're desperate for floor spacers.
He's a valuable perimeter guy. But the odds are against him progressing much past the point of, say, Korver or Redick: that is, a high-percentage complementary shooter. That's fine for a #12 pick--even if we did miss out on a franchise-changer thanks to our previous moron of a GM--but he'll never be anything like a go-to scorer. He just doesn't have the tools for it.