mg wrote:Inigo Montoya wrote:I wish I could find the comment I saw on the General Board but it was by a Spurs fan who said at the time that essentially Murray is not really a PG and is overrated. I can't remember exactly what he said but his post was well-reasoned.
I think we need to ask ourselves what kind of PG are we looking for. Do we want a floor general like CP3/Conley, a big defensive player who probably isn't a very good offensively and has a bad shot like Black, a scoring guard like FVV/Sexton, or any other combination. In other words, do we really need what would be considered a 'traditional' PG, or do we just need a good guard in that spot who doesn't necessarily have that skill but can score and/or defend well.
Looking at the teams that advanced far in the playoffs really none of them had that #1 lead ballhandler/pure floor general archetype. It might be better to have 2-3 guys on the floor who can handle the ball. Denver's best distributor is Jokic. It's Lebron in LA with a few combo guards such as DLo and Schroeder sprinkled in. It's probably Butler or old man Lowry in Miami. The Celtics have 3 combo guards in Smart, Brogdon, and White. The Warriors have had Draymond doing a chunk of the playmaking for years now.
Interesting points, but I think it is arguable that the Celtics lost their series as they didn't have a floor general and at times looked lost. I think that Murray was huge for the Nuggets, and he is the on ball leader, even if the ball is routed through Jokic more often than not.














