prophet_of_rage wrote:Chanel Bomber wrote:HarthorneWingo wrote:
I’m going to disagree based on my eye test. But if we’re looking to try to salvage this pick and give RJ some room to grow, then my recommendation would be to try bringing him off the bench with the second unit.
How about we bench Payton first, see how it goes with more shooting around RJ, and if RJ keeps struggling then bring him off the bench?
You might not like his game and that's perfectly fair, but I think the organization should be more invested in him than Payton. It's not like Payton is Chris Paul or Kyle Lowry, where the resume as a winning player should take precedence.
But is Payton the problem when Mitch's man, Randle's man and his check just sit in the paint on him. He doesn't have a 1-2 pullup. He doesn't have a catch and shoot. He doesn't have a left to right move. He does nothing to make you come out on him. And I say this as a believer in RJ. Stop blaming players you don't like for his limitations.
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I'm not blaming Payton for his limitations.
RJ needs to work on many facets of his game, including the catch-and-shoot, the pull-up and his handle. I'm not saying Payton is what's preventing RJ from transforming from this version that we're seeing now to a net positive.
But Payton's presence on this team means that RJ's limitations are only exposed instead of being minimized as he works on his game. We're not playing RJ in a role where his skill set can actually be useful, and we're doing that to accommodate Payton, who - in my opinion - wouldn't be a good player for
any team. The Knicks have nothing to gain with this current dynamic, they're setting themselves up to fail in all aspects.