Duke4life831 wrote:31to6 wrote:After years of wanting us to turn the keys over to JB and JT, I’m not loving the early returns. I’m willing to wait, or make a move if there’s one that sets us up for a better future. KAT and Sabonis are two of the only guys I can think of who might fit that criteria.
Kemba still touches the ball a lot, he's second in touches and 1st in time per possession and you still have plenty of games where Kemba is taking 18-20 shots in a game. So there is still plenty of offense to get handed over to Tatum and Brown for them to be the true #1 and #2 guys on the offense.
So ideally I would like to see them just officially hand the keys to them and see what they could do. But you cant do that with a ball oriented score first PG like Kemba in the lineup. That is why I do agree if the route to be chosen was to officially hand the keys to Tatum/Brown and not look back, Lonzo is the ideal PG for that scenario.
But with that said, I do agree with what youre saying. Im not sure I want to see more offensive responsibilities handed to those two. Im a huge Tatum fan, but we have yet to see him be a high volume scorer and an above-average efficient scorer at the same time for long periods. And with Brown Im not sold in his offensive creativity of him being a guy that can consistently create his own shot against a set defense in the half court.
Re: Kemba I was horrified by his signing. We can look good with him, but it’s rare, and he and the Jays are far less than the sum of the parts. I’d love Lonzo — or heck just Smart — in his place, but it’s water under the bridge now.
I feel like this year sucks, because it’s a development year we didn’t realize we needed: our two young stars need to figure out how to wear the crowns of being “the guys” and still play winning basketball. They’ve had a ton of success early in their careers, but with the help of a ton of vets who have now finally mostly left for nothing. They, for the first time, are where a lot of talented young NBA “stars” find themselves — surrounded by young teammates who mostly kind of suck. Can they handle the daily grind of that, while maintaining positive leadership energy, playing well, and doing all the right things? Can they avoid the temptation to have to lead the team in scoring, or develop their own “brands”, or whatever else might distract them? Can they keep making an impact on both sides of the floor and keep this team surprising people every playoffs?
I’d love to bring in another good vet or two — Barnes, Aaron Gordon, etc. — to help them out with this. Regardless though, that’s the task for this year.
It’d make a lot of a sense if we developed our young guys — Pritchard, Nesmith, Langford, RWilliams, TACKO — at the same time too.
(Not you, Semi, you mostly suck)
Paul Pierce appreciation society.