phillynative wrote:Eyeamok wrote:76ciology wrote:
I mean..
His advanced numbers looked good in college.
But given his length, where do you place him? His numbers looked good for a wing but his size is certainly a PG. I can see him being appealing if he is like 6’7” with 7’ wingspan. But everyone who has watched him play knows he has 0 skills to be a NBA caliber PG.
Not that im complaining because its not like we passed up on the next Giannis with Mikal Bridges.
So when he was drafted what was the plan for him. Replacement for Fultz? Was he best player available. Where was he gonna fit in with the team? What did coach Brown see that he liked so much?
Direct quote from Brown on what he saw in Zhaire :
When you look at just where I believe Zhaire can be, there are some common denominators to what Kawhi had when we first brought him to San Antonio,” Brown said. “In general, I think he’s going to be a work in progress. There’s lots to do, with a base that’s really special and very unique. Some of those qualities that Kawhi had when we first brought him to San Antonio, I do see parts of that in Zhaire.”
The other main component of the Leonard comparison is Brown’s desire to shift the 6-4 Smith from playing mostly at power forward in college, as Leonard did at San Diego State, to being a perimeter player in the NBA.
“At times it is [a hard transition,]” Brown said. “But I don’t even judge college basketball anymore to be positions really. … It was more of an interior-related skill package that we’ve seen progressively grow out to a perimeter-type package that we think can keep growing in that direction.”
Thats the problem with the mindset of this team in terms of roster construction.
Let’s draft a center with a physique of a SF
Let’s draft PGs who can’t shoot
Let’s draft a center who doesn’t play defense
Let’s draft a 6’4” guard who plays like a PF
Let’s draft a franchise player but keep drafting guys who plays like role players.
Let’s get assets, but drafts centers. Nobody overpays for centers.
There are like literally thousand of talent out there. We keep fitting a square peg on a round hole. Just because they are special doesn’t mean they’re valuable. Value is relative to utility.
There’s never been a time in history when we look back and say that the people who were censoring free speech were the good guys.