Coxy wrote:I like to think I'm a pretty patient person. I believe in being patient financially and budgeting wisely, I've been through years of long term health recovery, and I waited 3 dates before suggesting a hand job from my now wife. However, Kelly Oubre has done gone and sent me shooting towards the insane asylum in 9 quick games. There are moments during these games where I start to wonder if I am in fact, a homocidal maniac, only to calm down enough to put down the machette and realise, it's just Kelly Oubre that is making me want to butcher human flesh.
He's got to go. He has no place on either the starting unit, nor the bench, ever.
I'm not giving up the Warriors 1st this season, nor the Minnesota pick either, but we have to shed this clown off the roster somehow. Therefore, how can we do this? I want to see some idea's here people, maybe we can swindle the Knicks into taking his ass? Perhaps Myers can get some dirt on Masi Ujuri's love life to get him to take him off our hands? How can we shoft this dude off the payroll, immediately.
You might be patient w/ finances but not as a Warriors Fan. Kerr said it should take this team about 20 games to really find their stride - remember almost all of them haven't played together before and of them a few haven't played for over 9 months. Curry was out for over a year as was Oubre who didn't play in the bubble as he was coming off a nasty injury. Dubs just finished game 9. Even Wiggins had 12 games last season to get a feel of the motion offense Kerr likes to play - Oubre hasn't even gotten to that point yet - he's only at game 11 if u count pre-season.
Clearly Oubre is lost out there and it looks like he feels like he's on an island as he almost never gets the ball. When he finally does, he just tries to drive w/ it so it's clear it's taking him longer to figure out this motion offense. He does look like he's still working on it but his confidence has to be shaken.
Yes he's hard to watch right now, but I'd like to believe he will figure this out and learn to be less selfish w/ the ball and eventually gain the trust of the rest of the team, whether as a starter or a bench player.