The purpose bringing in Lowry is to have a floor general to allow players to be the best of themselves. Not to carry the scoring load every night, however as a former star when times come he can carry the scoring load (unlike Ariza). Lowry is a second coach on the court which is important. He can be a vocal voice and as a point he can dictate the offense as well. If Bam is taking the wrong approach now you have a point who can demand Bam to take over at the right times and force feed Bam.contract wrote:Some people don't seem to understand how hard the mid 30s hits players and how fast it can happen. This past season there were 2 players in the entire NBA 35 years or older that averaged even 15 ppg. Lebron and CP3 and that's it. Dropping the age to 34 adds only one player to that list ... Lowry.
The next guys that age on the scoring list were:
Horford (34): 14.2 ppg
Aldridge (35): 13.5 ppg
Melo (36): 13.4 ppg
Dragic (34): 13.4 ppg
Gay (34): 11.4 ppg
Lou Williams (34): 11.3 ppg
Jeff Green (34): 11.0 ppg
That's 10 guys in the entire league 34 or older averaging even 10 ppg ... and that includes guys who didn't play enough to officially qualify for the list. And frankly 33 really isn't much better. NBA life comes at guys hard and fast.
If you're looking to bring in a guy who is > 33, it better be in a low scoring complimentary role.
And know that Jimmy Butler's extension is bound to end in a train wreck.
We all heard the stories of veteran stars (Payton, Zo and Shaq) telling Wade its your time to take over and we will follow in the NBA finals. This is what Paul is doing with Ayton and Booker.
The hope will be that Lowry will allow Butler and Jimmy focus as on ball scorers in their favorite spots and players like Robinson can be a secondary off ball scorer feeding off of Lowry, and Butler and Bam. The Heat will not have to force certain shots.
Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk