Kerrsed wrote:lilfishi22 wrote:I guess my question was more general to the PG position and not necessarily specific to Ja. My view is that we're at the stage where we need someone experienced who can just do the job at the PG spot so i agree that we need a veteran guy to start. That's why as exciting as Ja, as exciting as Markelle, DSJ and I suppose Frank *could* be, no one really fits the description of someone that is ready to play and ready to play the right way. We're in desperate need of leadership as much as production/impact at the PG position and I just don't think any of these young PG's are ready for that role.
Unlike a team with many veterans who you could put an inexperienced PG out there to learn on the job and play the right way alongside vets, we don't have that luxury and throwing another inexperienced PG out there would just seem to prolong the issues we've had since Bledsoe left. I feel like we have good and talented pieces in place in enough spots to be competitive but our guys are still young, still inexperienced and just doesn't have a leader out there. Booker is doing his best to be a leader out there but some people just aren't suited for that role even if they are technically proficient at their job. If we can move some assets to bring in Conley or some other veteran PG who is just ready to play now and draft Ja, that would be ideal.
Guards usually dont take much time at all to develop, Bigs are the ones that take forever. I think with guards it happens somewhere from day one to maybe a year. If it doesnt happen by then (Being a solid PG) then it never happens. With Fox he was pretty bad his rookie season, but after the 1st year he became a stud. You have Tre Young in Atlanta who has been a stud since day 1.
Now after saying that i do also feel like the team and system plays a factor into that. Morant would be set up perfectly with us due to the young team around him and because of our team situation. We have a new coach and a new system, so its not like a young inexperienced PG coming in and having to learn how to play in a system that has been being used for like forever and all the players know it and their role. It allows Igor to in a way mold the system to him. All our guys are young, so its not like having a bunch of battle ridden vets taking issue with having to listen to a young stud coming in and trying to establish himself as the team leader or running the show. I think that is one of the reasons why Fox worked out so well in Sacramento or Young in Atlanta or even Simmons in Philly (Ball and Russell too), while other top PG prospects have looked less than stellar (SGA/Sexton/Ntilikina/DSJ/Dunn/Rozier).
I did read the article on Morant that The Stepien wrote....and honestly i dont know what to say. They go to list list why he is a great PG and player, all of which i agree, but when it comes to the negatives on him i really disagree. I mean he has elite speed, they even said themselves that his "handle is among the best in the country and, combined with his elite ability to change speeds, allows him to get wherever he wants on the floor" yet they go one to say this:Almost every point guard drafted highly in recent years has disappointed early in their career relative to their draft spot. Players like Ben Simmons and De’Aaron Fox who possess true outlier physical tools (Simmons has size, Fox has speed) can speed up their curve by simply being more athletic than their opposition.
So somehow Fox's speed sped up his curve, but that wont work for Morant who i believe is just as fast (And they themselves mention his elite speed)?
Look, the kid is going to be a star player. at 19 he is 6"3 (And growing), has elite speed, is the NCAA's best passer (#1 in assists), is a real team leader (Took his team from a 132nd preseason ranking to being #45), can not only create for others but create for himself (Just 28.7 percent of his makes being assisted with 64% True Shooting) while having a Nash like ability to know when to switch games from being a facilitator to scoring for himself. His defense isnt anywhere close to being as bad as they try to make it out to be, with a 93.5 Defensive rating being way way better than SGA who was known for his defense and had a 101 defensive rating.
The kid is the real deal. He ticks all the boxes. Really he only has 2 issues and both are very minor. He shoots 33% from 3, but his True Shooting and his FT shooting show he is a much better shooter and shouldnt have an issue being a better 3 point shooter. His other issue is his turnovers. 5 a game is high, but he still maintains a 2-1 assist to turnover ratio which is solid. He tends to try to force passes to teammates to try to get them involved, and to be honest Murray State doesnt have to greatest players around him. Its something that can be easily fixed.
One thing comparing him to one and done college players who were really good as a freshman. Morant wasn't even on any radars as a freshman. He blossomed into this as a sophomore against very weak competition.
It's really hard to know with a guy like this. It could go either way.
He's obviously talented. But I do wonder why no big schools wanted him coming out of high school and he ended up going to Murray St and then why he couldn't dominate that weaker competition last year...actually he wasn't bad...like 14/7 and 30% from 3.
But if you are arguing that he develops quickly instead of takes longer, he didn't develop fast enough to get on major schools radars to get any big conference school scholarships, and then he couldn't dominate the weak competition as a freshman.
His jump to the NBA will be a monumental step up in talent relative to a lot of these other guys.









