Midw35t wrote:There are so many players I consider guards that it makes it difficult to predict. I'll give my best shot. Though I think we still may try to find a deal for a cheap PF with some combo of Layman, Vanderbilt, Reid, Nowell + a future 2nd (I know).
Russell/Beasley/Okogie/Juancho/KAT
Rubio sixth man comes in for Beasley, followed by Culver for Okogie and Layman for Juancho, then Edwards for Russell and Davis for KAT.
Rubio, Edwards, Culver, Layman, Davis start the 2nd quarter.
Starting unit finishes it.
Rubio/Russell/Okogie, Edwards, or Culver (this will depend on who proves to shoot better this year and if Edwards proves out defensively. if Culver cannot shoot FTs then he is unplayable in close games)/Juancho/KAT close out the game.
Rubio wins 6th man of the year.
IMO the lineup flexibility is reliant on 3 key things ...
1. Will DLo and KAT click best with DLo at PG, SG, either or? ... much will hinge from there.
2. Will the Ant and Beasley prove willing & able defenders? ... their chance to be a starter or mere rotational role player.
3. Will Okogie and Culver prove capable of making "open" shots? ... something has to give here.
4. How durable will Layman and Juancho at F? ... specifically on the defensive side.
5. Will McDaniels or Vanderbilt prove capable of filling even limited roles? ... wishful thinking or add needed depth.
it's difficult to really lay out rotations and depth charts until (specifically) #2 and #3 are ironed out. Fortunately we pretty much know Rubio can operate as a starter, lead the second unit, or some of both. Just need to find that blend of players who can play winning basketball.
Flip response to Love wanting out, "He has no reason to be upset, you're either a part of the problem or a part of the solution"