ThunderBolt wrote:I think you can attribute that as much to our lack of offensive philosophy as you can Ferguson’s own lack of abilities. I’ve seen him put the balk on the floor and admittedly he isn’t great. However if he were in a real offense how many opportunities would he have gotten this year to develop that skill? I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s been directly told to not worry about driving to the basket. In a 3&D league we are going to go so overboard that we try to develop players lacking fundamentals.
Oh I don't doubt that for one second. The Thunder very rarely find the right balance, for anything really. The kid played 26 minutes a night and got to touch the ball without taking a shot 10 times. Out of his 56 offensive possessions per game, Ferguson spent 40 of them without even getting to touch the ball (71.4 % of them) and he was part of the offensive insofar that he didn't shoot the ball, but actually kept it moving, on 10 out of 56 possesions (17.9 % of them). No NBA player is that passive unless the team actively and intentionally treats him that way. They should have printe a huge sign on his back which said "Ignore me" so opposing teams just stopped bothering with him altogether. They don't have to account for him because we just use him as a warm body out there.
This the dumbing down of Adams' role, just on a smaller scale. They put players in the doghouse while playing them 30 minutes a night. And then years pass and we talk abot how players didn't improve. Well, no ****.
Donovan, the player developer, my ass.
"I don't know of any player that, when the shot goes up, he doesn't want it to go in," Donovan said