DCZards wrote:nate33 wrote:I'd be remiss if I didn't point out that our 3-game winning streak coincided with Sarr being out of the lineup.
We were 4-5 in games that Sarr didn't play.
We were 3-38 in the games that he played. Ouch!
This is the reality of very young big men. They don't know what they are doing on defense.
The winning streak is more about our opponents than Sarr.
Minny was without Ant and Randle, Charlotte was decimated by injuries, and a bad Brooklyn team had some key players out.
Randomness, pure and simple, it's kind of crazy, to me, to imagine that Sarr's presence, or lack there of is the difference between us being a .450/.475 team, and being a .07 team. It's a funny kind of twist on on the court/off the court, that is found out immediately through logic. This team is total ---, and had a break in the schedule, and in the quality of the opponents combined that coincided with his absence. We could have a healthy Giannis, a Luca, or a healthy Anthony Davis, correspondingly no Sarr, and we'd still be no better than a .250 to .300 team and that is probably a large reach on the upside difference too.
I'm sure him being a rookie learning on the court isn't as helpful as having a high floor veteran who gets it all, or even having a star instead, but it's immaterial when your starting lineup, and your bench are the worst in the league, bar none. We just suck, with or without him, and some 9 game sample size, is irrelevant to that reality.
Btw, I don't care at all that we suck, its the plan, and its being executed far better than Portland and say, New Jersey's botched tanks which will take them both nowhere.