Saberestar wrote:Gambo said that he got a text message from a high ranking NBA guy saying him that the Suns is the team that has promised to Garland that we will pick him at #6.
Gambo added that he knows that we like Garland for sure and that an option that we are thinking too is to trade #6 for Lonzo Ball.
Welcome to Brandon Knight 2.0. This is not inspiring and makes me want Coby over Garland. A few excerpts...
https://www.thestepien.com/2019/04/25/draft-notes-darius-garland-vs-damian-lillard/Here’s the problem for Garland. He has Lillard’s most obvious strength (the shooting ability and shiftiness to allow him to functionally use it) and his most obvious weakness (the fact that he’s not really a point guard), but lacks all of the less obvious (and super strong) strengths of Lillard’s college profile that indeed allow the rest of his game to play to the ability it does.
I’m talking about athleticism, explosion, decision-making and specifically, the ability to almost never make mistakes.
In contrast, Darius Garland turned the ball over 4.3 times per 40 minutes against sub-solid early season competition and 6.3 times per 100 minutes. This is a major departure point in the profiles of these two players.
It comes down to explosion and suddenness. Lillard’s ability to get to the rim in college essentially allowed him to greatly limit his 2-point jumpers, whereas Garland due to being less bursty and less explosive, had to settle for numerous 2-pt jump shots (which to his credit he made).
Still, even acknowledging Lillard wasn’t yet Lillard as a freshman, we can’t get around the obvious. Garland isn’t explosive as Lillard was, and Garland isn’t the caretaker/decision-maker that Lillard was.
Jump shooting is very important, but jump shooting on its own is not enough. Not even close. Not when the top competition can make passes like these.
Which is not to say Garland can’t improve. There exists that possibility since sufficiently great jump shooters distort the defense and create openings that few players have. But Garland right now is much, much, much more likely to not be Lillard than to be Lillard. In fact, though his on court game resembles Lillard’s on the surface, his underlying offensive strengths and weaknesses, the way he actually plays, if we can look past that he shoots a deep step-back jumper, actually compares much more favorably to Lillard’s teammate CJ McCollum.
Now ask yourself a question. Be honest. Do you believe Garland belongs with the names in that first group?
And another. Do you believe Garland belongs with the names in that second group?
And one more. If he does belong with the names of the players in that second group, where is he as good, and where is he worse?
END.