Brewhoopfan wrote:raferfenix wrote:EastSideBucksFan wrote:While Bledsoe's playoff failures are a major concern right now and shouldn't be understated.
I feel like two things are being completely dismissed this in Brogdon v Bledsoe debate
1. Bledsoe was First Team All NBA Defense at PG.
2. Brogdon at point guard was a failure that triggered the Bledsoe trade.
I feel like Bledsoe was kind of written out of the offensive game plan too much this year and part of me liked him deferring to get others involved, but, I feel he wasn't able to turn that switch back on when we needed it most in the playoffs.
I'm very curious to see how his offensive role/usage changes this year with no Brogdon.
It's a fair point that both Bledsoe and Middleton could benefit from Brogdon not being around to take as many shots and handle to ball as much.
Khash in particular could be expected to score more now that he's making max money.
What triggered the Bledsoe trade was an opportunity to get better and Brogdon's flexibility allowed him to move off the ball to insert Bledsoe. Although to be fair, the whole damn thing was destined to fail with Kidd at the helm.
There's no way, zip, zilch, zero, that Bledsoe/Middleton are going to replace Brogdon's production at the same efficiency. I prefer Bledsoe distribute all season long. His game isn't built for playoff basketball, and I'd rather not have the team have to make usage adjustments at playoff time due to his inefficiency.
I think it was extremely obvious how slow Bucks guards were with Brogdon leading at PG and Delly was backing up. Bucks were searching for a point guard and Bledsoe happened to be there.
Khash can pickup 5 points on good efficiency pretty easily I think.
Bledsoe we'll see. But, Bucks absolutely need his bully ball attacking the basket in the playoffs. That is definitely something that is needed in the playoffs even moreso than regular season.























