SOUL wrote:
Having a young team means losing a lot. Losing a lot means lottery picks with more younger players. Delaying the process of putting said young players in a lineup together until there are 10-15 games left in the season instead of giving them a bulk of the minutes and growing together is not only bad for evaluation, it backs up the entire process of growth. Those young guys that had to wait a year to actually be involved or play with the guys they envisioned playing with at the start aren't going to let some new rookie come in, no matter how ready or not he is, and let them basically skip an entire phase that they had to go through. It fostered a bad environment where everything seemed to be the slow burn approach.
I actually agree with this. But if you're taking about Isaac, then IDK how we approach this. Isaac had a really injury-riddled rookie season last year, and it was best that we re-built his body before anything else. Maybe this will be the same approach with Bamba, hopefully not. But Bamba struggled banging bodies against summer league competition. Hopefully he will have a healthier rookie season than Isaac however.
But if you're talking about our past teams, to be honest, I think its worth looking back and see that it was only during Mario's rookie year that we started limiting our rookie's minutes. In fact, that was one of the differences Hennigan had with Skiles. Hennigan wanted to play our young guys, and Skiles wanted Mario to earn his minutes. Gordon didn't get much minutes early on because we had Tobias, who was already better than him. And we actually opened up minutes for Gordon when we traded Tobias. But really, Hezonja may have just arrived at the right place but at the wrong time.
If we're talking about the Harkless or the OQuinn, then you may have a point. However, would you have gifted Harkless more minutes when he looked very passive for most of the time he was on the court? The newer guys like Gordon and Tobias were proving more worthy of the playing time on the court. Oquinn, himself, was playing behind Vuc, who was a better "young" piece at that time. But I do recall us giving Oquinn the role of being the inbounder during crucial situation because he was "good" at it, which is kind of a big role too if you think about it.
THe real reason why we actually ended up not playing these guys minutes, was actually how messed up the first re-build was. Guys were basically playing the same position. Actually, think about it, only Payton and Oladipo didn't really have any competition for those minutes. We even played Evan at SF, and even have a lineups of Payton-Oladipo-Evan-Tobias-Vuc.
























