2018 Summer League General Discussion
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Orlando Sentinel: From what you’ve seen of Mohamed Bamba already, what can he ultimately accomplish? What’s his ceiling?
Steve Clifford: Oh, he has a tremendous upside. The NBA now is so much about two-way players, versatility and positional size. And he has all of those things. When you start watching him, this stands out right away: his size, length and agility. The rebounding part, the blocked-shot part — those are the things that strike you right away. But he also, to me, has a very good feel and instincts for the game naturally. He can read the defense. He can anticipate off the ball. I see someone who sees the game, and in this league, it’s hard to win if you can’t play a smart game. He’s going to play an intelligent, smart game, which in this league is paramount.
OS: How do you achieve balance with this team, which seems to be short on shooting at the moment?
Clifford: That’s what the summer’s for. There’s two ways for improvement in the summer, in the offseason. You use the draft, free agency and trades for external development, and then you want internal development. Progress is just as important. I’ll give you an example. We went in Charlotte between our second year and our third year from a team that I believe was 26th in 3-point makes to fourth in makes and eighth in percentage. It was a big part from going from 33 wins to 48 wins. It wasn’t all Nic Batum and Jeremy Lin and Troy Daniels. Kemba Walker went from 33 percent to 39 percent, and Marvin Williams made many more. That was all from the work they did in the summer and primarily with [assistant coach] Bruce Kreutzer.
We have that going on right now, too. Some of it is roster-building. One thing I’m pleased with is the younger guys are here. Vooch is here. But these guys are working. Evan’s been in Miami; he just stopped in here and he’s working hard. D.J. Augustin, I know guys who’ve coached him, and he’s a hard worker. Aaron Gordon? I went out [to California] and watched him. He’s an extremely hard worker. Terrence Ross is in here. They’re working.
OS: Your team has a lot of centers now. At what point, if not immediately, do you start thinking how you juggle that?
Clifford: We’re not even in July yet. We’re just getting into free agency.
OS: You mentioned the visit with Aaron Gordon. How many players from last season’s roster have you spoken with face-to-face?
Clifford: Most of them. I’ve spoken with everybody, either by phone or face-to-face. The majority of them I’ve tried to get in front of so we could talk. With some of them, we’ve watched film. I’ve had more time to watch film, so I feel like I’m a little bit more up to speed on guys and how they play. But to me, that’s what this whole offseason is all about. Again, it’s not just the external development part. Jeff [Weltman] and [General Manager] John [Hammond] are highly organized. They know how to build a winning team. And then our part is more developing — maxing out the players that we have. So that’s what more of my role is.
OS: You went out to San Jose to see Aaron Gordon. You could’ve just called him up on the phone. Why go out there? And how did that go?
Clifford: It was very good for me because I got to see him work out. When I first got here the first day, the three of us sat down — Jeff, John and I — and they gave me a good evaluation on all the players, where they’re at. So it was a great starting point for me. And they had told me what a great worker Aaron was. So when I went out there I watched him work out in the weight room and then also on the floor. And then we had a good chance to talk, too. So it was good. Obviously, there’s a big difference between talking to someone on the phone and meeting them face-to-face. In order to build the right type of player-coach relationship, which is so critical in this league, I just feel like the face-to-face part is much more beneficial.
OS: Where do you stand on your film review of last season?
Clifford: I would say the first thing that stands out is the bad luck. They were 8-4. I don’t care who you are, it is hard to withstand the health issues that they had. Terrence Ross playing 24 games and Jonathan Isaac playing 27 games. Vooch missed time. Aaron missed time. They just had so many injuries. I think that was a big part of it. At 8-4 against a difficult schedule, they had gotten off to a good start. That’s what I’m looking at as a glass half-full: evaluating the good things that were done in that stretch and then [asking] why weren’t they sustainable. And a big part of that was health.
OS: How far through the season are you?
Clifford: Well, I’ve skipped around a little bit because I want to get a look at different players. So for instance, watching Khem Birch and the younger guys that played later in the year — I’ve done some of that, too. So I’m skipping around. I’d say I’ve watched probably a little bit more than a quarter of the games.
OS: Will you watch all 82?
Clifford: That’s my plan.
OS: What does a typical day look like for you?
Clifford: A big part of it early was putting the staff together. We’re almost done with that. A lot of time was just getting to know the players. We have Jonathan and Wesley [Iwundu] with Rodney Purvis, Khem Birch and Jamel Artis — those guys have been in here four or five days a week. So when they’re in here and the coaching staff’s working them out, I like to be down [on the court] for that so I can watch them. So that’s two or three hours a day. And then I’ve spent quite a bit of time on the draft. I’m not nearly as involved. I think coaches have to be careful how much they get involved in the draft. But Jeff did give me film on six or seven guys to watch just so they could get my feedback. So that’s taken some time, too.
OS: What else have you gleaned about what Mo Bamba can do offensively right now and what he ultimately can do?
Clifford: They also had some edits of him working out some. To me, [one of the] things that you want to be able to do in today’s NBA offensively is play 5-out, which is what I believe he has the potential to be able to do. He shot just under two attempts from 3 a game in college; he shoots it easily. He shot just under 30 percent, but it’s new for him. He shot just almost 70 percent from the free-throw line, which is usually a good indicator of what type of range they can have. So I think he’ll be able to shoot from there and drive the ball from there. And then the other thing that he obviously has is, especially because he’s such a lob threat with his length, if you can’t play 5-out, then I think you’re looking for the dynamic roller — the [Clint] Capelas, guys like that, that can put pressure on your defense with the roll game. That is one of the things he fits. Then, at the other end of the floor, his agility and size and ability to block shots make it so that you’re not going to have to give as much help in pick-and-rolls, which is a major, major thing. There are teams now building their whole defense around guys like that. So I’ll know more in these next few weeks watching him, but he’s the kind of guy you can build a lot of things around that fit in today’s NBA.
OS: Jeff Weltman said that with a frontcourt of Aaron Gordon, Jonathan Isaac and Mo Bamba an opponent ultimately won’t be able to small-ball them off the court. Do you see it the same way?
Clifford: Absolutely. All three of those guys have size but they have athleticism and agility. So I totally agree with that.
Clifford sounds giddy to work with this team, especially with the addition of Bamba. So pumped for Summer League!
Steve Clifford: Oh, he has a tremendous upside. The NBA now is so much about two-way players, versatility and positional size. And he has all of those things. When you start watching him, this stands out right away: his size, length and agility. The rebounding part, the blocked-shot part — those are the things that strike you right away. But he also, to me, has a very good feel and instincts for the game naturally. He can read the defense. He can anticipate off the ball. I see someone who sees the game, and in this league, it’s hard to win if you can’t play a smart game. He’s going to play an intelligent, smart game, which in this league is paramount.
OS: How do you achieve balance with this team, which seems to be short on shooting at the moment?
Clifford: That’s what the summer’s for. There’s two ways for improvement in the summer, in the offseason. You use the draft, free agency and trades for external development, and then you want internal development. Progress is just as important. I’ll give you an example. We went in Charlotte between our second year and our third year from a team that I believe was 26th in 3-point makes to fourth in makes and eighth in percentage. It was a big part from going from 33 wins to 48 wins. It wasn’t all Nic Batum and Jeremy Lin and Troy Daniels. Kemba Walker went from 33 percent to 39 percent, and Marvin Williams made many more. That was all from the work they did in the summer and primarily with [assistant coach] Bruce Kreutzer.
We have that going on right now, too. Some of it is roster-building. One thing I’m pleased with is the younger guys are here. Vooch is here. But these guys are working. Evan’s been in Miami; he just stopped in here and he’s working hard. D.J. Augustin, I know guys who’ve coached him, and he’s a hard worker. Aaron Gordon? I went out [to California] and watched him. He’s an extremely hard worker. Terrence Ross is in here. They’re working.
OS: Your team has a lot of centers now. At what point, if not immediately, do you start thinking how you juggle that?
Clifford: We’re not even in July yet. We’re just getting into free agency.
OS: You mentioned the visit with Aaron Gordon. How many players from last season’s roster have you spoken with face-to-face?
Clifford: Most of them. I’ve spoken with everybody, either by phone or face-to-face. The majority of them I’ve tried to get in front of so we could talk. With some of them, we’ve watched film. I’ve had more time to watch film, so I feel like I’m a little bit more up to speed on guys and how they play. But to me, that’s what this whole offseason is all about. Again, it’s not just the external development part. Jeff [Weltman] and [General Manager] John [Hammond] are highly organized. They know how to build a winning team. And then our part is more developing — maxing out the players that we have. So that’s what more of my role is.
OS: You went out to San Jose to see Aaron Gordon. You could’ve just called him up on the phone. Why go out there? And how did that go?
Clifford: It was very good for me because I got to see him work out. When I first got here the first day, the three of us sat down — Jeff, John and I — and they gave me a good evaluation on all the players, where they’re at. So it was a great starting point for me. And they had told me what a great worker Aaron was. So when I went out there I watched him work out in the weight room and then also on the floor. And then we had a good chance to talk, too. So it was good. Obviously, there’s a big difference between talking to someone on the phone and meeting them face-to-face. In order to build the right type of player-coach relationship, which is so critical in this league, I just feel like the face-to-face part is much more beneficial.
OS: Where do you stand on your film review of last season?
Clifford: I would say the first thing that stands out is the bad luck. They were 8-4. I don’t care who you are, it is hard to withstand the health issues that they had. Terrence Ross playing 24 games and Jonathan Isaac playing 27 games. Vooch missed time. Aaron missed time. They just had so many injuries. I think that was a big part of it. At 8-4 against a difficult schedule, they had gotten off to a good start. That’s what I’m looking at as a glass half-full: evaluating the good things that were done in that stretch and then [asking] why weren’t they sustainable. And a big part of that was health.
OS: How far through the season are you?
Clifford: Well, I’ve skipped around a little bit because I want to get a look at different players. So for instance, watching Khem Birch and the younger guys that played later in the year — I’ve done some of that, too. So I’m skipping around. I’d say I’ve watched probably a little bit more than a quarter of the games.
OS: Will you watch all 82?
Clifford: That’s my plan.
OS: What does a typical day look like for you?
Clifford: A big part of it early was putting the staff together. We’re almost done with that. A lot of time was just getting to know the players. We have Jonathan and Wesley [Iwundu] with Rodney Purvis, Khem Birch and Jamel Artis — those guys have been in here four or five days a week. So when they’re in here and the coaching staff’s working them out, I like to be down [on the court] for that so I can watch them. So that’s two or three hours a day. And then I’ve spent quite a bit of time on the draft. I’m not nearly as involved. I think coaches have to be careful how much they get involved in the draft. But Jeff did give me film on six or seven guys to watch just so they could get my feedback. So that’s taken some time, too.
OS: What else have you gleaned about what Mo Bamba can do offensively right now and what he ultimately can do?
Clifford: They also had some edits of him working out some. To me, [one of the] things that you want to be able to do in today’s NBA offensively is play 5-out, which is what I believe he has the potential to be able to do. He shot just under two attempts from 3 a game in college; he shoots it easily. He shot just under 30 percent, but it’s new for him. He shot just almost 70 percent from the free-throw line, which is usually a good indicator of what type of range they can have. So I think he’ll be able to shoot from there and drive the ball from there. And then the other thing that he obviously has is, especially because he’s such a lob threat with his length, if you can’t play 5-out, then I think you’re looking for the dynamic roller — the [Clint] Capelas, guys like that, that can put pressure on your defense with the roll game. That is one of the things he fits. Then, at the other end of the floor, his agility and size and ability to block shots make it so that you’re not going to have to give as much help in pick-and-rolls, which is a major, major thing. There are teams now building their whole defense around guys like that. So I’ll know more in these next few weeks watching him, but he’s the kind of guy you can build a lot of things around that fit in today’s NBA.
OS: Jeff Weltman said that with a frontcourt of Aaron Gordon, Jonathan Isaac and Mo Bamba an opponent ultimately won’t be able to small-ball them off the court. Do you see it the same way?
Clifford: Absolutely. All three of those guys have size but they have athleticism and agility. So I totally agree with that.
Clifford sounds giddy to work with this team, especially with the addition of Bamba. So pumped for Summer League!
Magic din romania
Ma numesc petre,sunt de la constanta
Fire Frank Vogel
Ma numesc petre,sunt de la constanta
Fire Frank Vogel
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Bakomagic
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Wonder what the starting lineup will be?
Gotta believe that Bamba and Isaac are locks.
Gotta believe that Bamba and Isaac are locks.
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
- Furinkazan
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Bakomagic wrote:Wonder what the starting lineup will be?
Gotta believe that Bamba and Isaac are locks.
Bamba starting over Vuc????In what universe?
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
~Snoopy~ wrote:Bakomagic wrote:Wonder what the starting lineup will be?
Gotta believe that Bamba and Isaac are locks.
Bamba starting over Vuc????In what universe?
Summer League universe.
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Bakomagic wrote:Wonder what the starting lineup will be?
Gotta believe that Bamba and Isaac are locks.
Really depends on who they bring in to play point guard. If they don't bring any good ball handlers to Vegas, we could be looking at...
G: Iwundu
G: Frazier
F: Jackson
F: Isaac
C: Bamba
Which would be kind of neat because all five of those guys could make the opening night roster.
More realistically, they bring in a capable point guard and Jackson comes off the bench.
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Bakomagic
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Jiwol wrote:~Snoopy~ wrote:Bakomagic wrote:Wonder what the starting lineup will be?
Gotta believe that Bamba and Isaac are locks.
Bamba starting over Vuc????In what universe?
Summer League universe.
Haha thanks!
I was like...”this is the summer league thread right?”
Vuc fans triggered, haha jk
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Not if Birch is also in SL. You gotta think the coaches will put him there as well... Maybe Bamba Birch Isaac for the front court? LOL
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
hoping to see isaac has beefed up a bit and is fitter
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Bakomagic
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Knightro wrote:Bakomagic wrote:Wonder what the starting lineup will be?
Gotta believe that Bamba and Isaac are locks.
Really depends on who they bring in to play point guard. If they don't bring any good ball handlers to Vegas, we could be looking at...
G: Iwundu
G: Frazier
F: Jackson
F: Isaac
C: Bamba
Which would be kind of neat because all five of those guys could make the opening night roster.
More realistically, they bring in a capable point guard and Jackson comes off the bench.
I’d definitely like to see that lineup at some point in the summer league “all pterodactyl lineup”
Spacing be damned haha.
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Bamba better start after being the 6th pick. Birch is cool and all... but undrafted GLeague guy versus high lottery pick means you play Bamba next to Isaac.
BadMofoPimp wrote:Durant thinks Vooch is one of the Best Centers in the NBA. I will take his word over a couch-GM yelling at a TV.
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Cammo101 wrote:nymets1 wrote:I can imagine if any of the PG'S are playing good, That we should sign them because it probably be an upgrade over Augustin and Mack.
Augustin is very under-appreciated on this board.
I can't imagine how this could be true. We are -578 while he is on the floor since he joined this team. For some context... we were -356 over the last two seasons when he wasn't on the floor and -348 over the last two seasons when Payton was on the floor.
Augustin is a very poor defender and facilitator. His dribble takes him nowhere useful and he doesn't have the vision or size to find passing lanes; as evidenced by his AST%/TOV% (1.48) and AST%/USG% (1.31) ratios.
Augustin has only two things going for him: his shooting line and the fact that his hair doesn't make him a magnet for criticism.
If the NBA was a shooting contest, this guy would be in the HOF:

...but I'd be surprised if more than three people on this forum could name him without looking up the image source.
Augustin might be in China right now if Hennigan wasn't desperately trying to save his job two summers ago.
We're going to lose a lot of games next year and Augustin will chip in more than his fair share to the effort, but fortunately for us, losing games isn't the worst thing for fixing what ails this franchise. Nobody should be grateful to have a replacement-level player earning $7 mil per year on their roster though. The appropriate compensation for such players is the league minimum salary.
"Xatticus has always been, in my humble opinion best poster here. Should write articles or something."
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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basketballRob
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
~Snoopy~ wrote:Bakomagic wrote:Wonder what the starting lineup will be?
Gotta believe that Bamba and Isaac are locks.
Bamba starting over Vuc????In what universe?
Yes Bamba will probably start over Vooch in the regular season.
Len is probably better than Vooch and the Suns just renounced him.
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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NBAchamps2017
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
~Snoopy~ wrote:Bakomagic wrote:Wonder what the starting lineup will be?
Gotta believe that Bamba and Isaac are locks.
Bamba starting over Vuc????In what universe?
I’m outta here if Vucevic is still here next season! Fournier and Mack too!
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Actually.. if Vuc would be ok with the bench role then i would be fine. No pressure to go up against the starters in the other team. He will juat go up against their bench where he can go dominatenthe boarda like he did a few years ago
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
I mean Vuc is way better than Biz as the back up C
Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
Xatticus wrote:Cammo101 wrote:nymets1 wrote:I can imagine if any of the PG'S are playing good, That we should sign them because it probably be an upgrade over Augustin and Mack.
Augustin is very under-appreciated on this board.
I can't imagine how this could be true. We are -578 while he is on the floor since he joined this team. For some context... we were -356 over the last two seasons when he wasn't on the floor and -348 over the last two seasons when Payton was on the floor.
Augustin is a very poor defender and facilitator. His dribble takes him nowhere useful and he doesn't have the vision or size to find passing lanes; as evidenced by his AST%/TOV% (1.48) and AST%/USG% (1.31) ratios.
Augustin has only two things going for him: his shooting line and the fact that his hair doesn't make him a magnet for criticism.
If the NBA was a shooting contest, this guy would be in the HOF:
...but I'd be surprised if more than three people on this forum could name him without looking up the image source.
Augustin might be in China right now if Hennigan wasn't desperately trying to save his job two summers ago.
We're going to lose a lot of games next year and Augustin will chip in more than his fair share to the effort, but fortunately for us, losing games isn't the worst thing for fixing what ails this franchise. Nobody should be grateful to have a replacement-level player earning $7 mil per year on their roster though. The appropriate compensation for such players is the league minimum salary.
dj’s +/- is one of the worst way to measure his effect on the court. Dj was like one of our more healthy players last yr. having played 75 of the possible 82 games, with the beating we’ve had the whole season, obviously those margins will have accumulated to his +/- when he is playing with a bunch of backups most of the time, because our main guys missed like 1/3 of the season each.
Having said that It actually speaks volume regarding this team when dj was -578, yet, is top in ws% and our most efficient player last year based on his ts%.
Also, if you want to compare him to elf. Elf was 2.7 in ws% compared to dj’s 4.1.
Augustin’s a:to ratio will always be bad because he is more of a scorer than a facilitator.

Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
fendilim wrote:Xatticus wrote:Cammo101 wrote:
Augustin is very under-appreciated on this board.
I can't imagine how this could be true. We are -578 while he is on the floor since he joined this team. For some context... we were -356 over the last two seasons when he wasn't on the floor and -348 over the last two seasons when Payton was on the floor.
Augustin is a very poor defender and facilitator. His dribble takes him nowhere useful and he doesn't have the vision or size to find passing lanes; as evidenced by his AST%/TOV% (1.48) and AST%/USG% (1.31) ratios.
Augustin has only two things going for him: his shooting line and the fact that his hair doesn't make him a magnet for criticism.
If the NBA was a shooting contest, this guy would be in the HOF:
...but I'd be surprised if more than three people on this forum could name him without looking up the image source.
Augustin might be in China right now if Hennigan wasn't desperately trying to save his job two summers ago.
We're going to lose a lot of games next year and Augustin will chip in more than his fair share to the effort, but fortunately for us, losing games isn't the worst thing for fixing what ails this franchise. Nobody should be grateful to have a replacement-level player earning $7 mil per year on their roster though. The appropriate compensation for such players is the league minimum salary.
dj’s +/- is one of the worst way to measure his effect on the court. Dj was like one of our more healthy players last yr. having played 75 of the possible 82 games, with the beating we’ve had the whole season, obviously those margins will have accumulated to his +/- when he is playing with a bunch of backups most of the time, because our main guys missed like 1/3 of the season each.
Having said that It actually speaks volume regarding this team when dj was -578, yet, is top in ws% and our most efficient player last year based on his ts%.
Also, if you want to compare him to elf. Elf was 2.7 in ws% compared to dj’s 4.1.
Yeah but Elfrid's win share the year before that was the highest on the team and nobody cared, so I don't care about any stat DJ really puts up. He's too small, pounds the ball, and is a decent to good PG every other year. He's not an abomination out there or anything, but I would look to move on from him to get younger in that position with literally almost any point guard on the market that has an ounce of potential.
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
obviously, moving on from dj is the best way to go. But for someone to say he isnt an nba player or whatever is hilarious, absurd, and honestly quite an idiotic opinion.SOUL wrote:fendilim wrote:Xatticus wrote:
I can't imagine how this could be true. We are -578 while he is on the floor since he joined this team. For some context... we were -356 over the last two seasons when he wasn't on the floor and -348 over the last two seasons when Payton was on the floor.
Augustin is a very poor defender and facilitator. His dribble takes him nowhere useful and he doesn't have the vision or size to find passing lanes; as evidenced by his AST%/TOV% (1.48) and AST%/USG% (1.31) ratios.
Augustin has only two things going for him: his shooting line and the fact that his hair doesn't make him a magnet for criticism.
If the NBA was a shooting contest, this guy would be in the HOF:
...but I'd be surprised if more than three people on this forum could name him without looking up the image source.
Augustin might be in China right now if Hennigan wasn't desperately trying to save his job two summers ago.
We're going to lose a lot of games next year and Augustin will chip in more than his fair share to the effort, but fortunately for us, losing games isn't the worst thing for fixing what ails this franchise. Nobody should be grateful to have a replacement-level player earning $7 mil per year on their roster though. The appropriate compensation for such players is the league minimum salary.
dj’s +/- is one of the worst way to measure his effect on the court. Dj was like one of our more healthy players last yr. having played 75 of the possible 82 games, with the beating we’ve had the whole season, obviously those margins will have accumulated to his +/- when he is playing with a bunch of backups most of the time, because our main guys missed like 1/3 of the season each.
Having said that It actually speaks volume regarding this team when dj was -578, yet, is top in ws% and our most efficient player last year based on his ts%.
Also, if you want to compare him to elf. Elf was 2.7 in ws% compared to dj’s 4.1.
Yeah but Elfrid's win share the year before that was the highest on the team and nobody cared, so I don't care about any stat DJ really puts up. He's too small, pounds the ball, and is a decent to good PG every other year. He's not an abomination out there or anything, but I would look to move on from him to get younger in that position with literally almost any point guard on the market that has an ounce of potential.

Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
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Re: 2018 Summer League Roster thread
j-ragg wrote:Bamba better start after being the 6th pick. Birch is cool and all... but undrafted GLeague guy versus high lottery pick means you play Bamba next to Isaac.
Absolutely. Even in the regular season lineup, there’s no point to Vuc being on the roster with Bamba being the premiere investment at #6. Assets need to be shuffled around and Vuc is one of them.













