dougthonus wrote:ATRAIN53 wrote:KC seems a little edgier over there at NBC. Cool.
His Satoransky man crush is pretty high as well.
If they want to trade Dunn still and get some value, then the talk should be he is starting.
Whose going to give us value for a back-up PG on a contract year that hasn't panned out.
I love the guy but he can't stay on the floor because of his style of play. Frustrating.
Someone will lose a PG in training camp and will call.
Archie is a throwback type PG. I think he works with Zach and Otto taking a ton of shots.
If Zach steps it up on D
I always hate this thought that you do anything with a guy's minutes to create value. If he wins the job then he wins the job and we should play him. If he can't beat out Sato to win the job then starting him won't do us any good. We aren't going to get more than a 2nd rounder in terms of value unless he plays so well that we no longer want to trade him anyway.
Kris Dunn is absolutely a known commodity in this league. Doesn't affect his trade value one bit whether he starts or not. Starting would only stroke his ego and embarrass Sato. That's it.
For the life of me I can't think of a single reason for this "start Dunn at first and then let Sato steal his job" crap. Fu**ing around with that stuff is always risky in the NBA, where egos and locker room factions come into play. Just make a decision and stick with it for a while.
That said, an "open competition" in practice is completely useless anyway. These aren't rookies. Dunn has had several seasons to show what he can do in actual games, and so has Sato. The results are clear. The team needs to decide once and for all what kind of a PG we want running things. This stuff can't be decided by Dunn "looking like a real dog" in some bulls**t practice scrimmage.
There are literally no downsides to starting Satoransky.















