Kingster your a bright guy, but don't let yourself be blinded by whats fun to watch. Yeah, its fun to watch this little 5'9" player drive into the basket and somehow throw up a shot among'st the giants and have it go in. He's a very talented player, and his height has nothing to do with that aspect. However, and I speak from personal preference, I like a PG that scores his points within the flow of the game. I watched a game with Chris Paul the other night, and at the end of the game, I was surprised to find out he had 25 pts and 11 assists. I didn't remember him scoring that much, or assisting that much. But he did! Because he did it within the flow of the game.
Now you can argue that IT has to make an immediate impact because he comes off the bench. That might fly if he had played differently when he started. But he didn't. In theory, a PG should make everyone around him better. And I think its a cop out to say that he shouldn't because the players around him are incapable. If you keep everyone involved, their focus and energy will stay consistent. But if you battle on defense, grab a rebound and pass it to your PG, who then flies down the court and stops and pops for a three, misses, and now your running back the other way, you start to wonder if your sole purpose is help you PG score. I've been there and done that. Self motivation only lasts so long in the face of selfishness. At least let me touch the damm ball before you shoot it.
Its either a team sport or its not. A team is five guys working together to beat the other team. Not four guys working together to help fill the stat line of one player. I love Thomas! He's supremely talented. But he gets in his own way. The decision he needs to make, is does he want to be remembered as a player like Chris Paul, or a player like Nate Robinson, who by the way is someone he emulates. His destiny is staring him in the face. The main question is, how does he visualize himself. That might decide his future in the league.
Now you can argue that IT has to make an immediate impact because he comes off the bench. That might fly if he had played differently when he started. But he didn't. In theory, a PG should make everyone around him better. And I think its a cop out to say that he shouldn't because the players around him are incapable. If you keep everyone involved, their focus and energy will stay consistent. But if you battle on defense, grab a rebound and pass it to your PG, who then flies down the court and stops and pops for a three, misses, and now your running back the other way, you start to wonder if your sole purpose is help you PG score. I've been there and done that. Self motivation only lasts so long in the face of selfishness. At least let me touch the damm ball before you shoot it.
Its either a team sport or its not. A team is five guys working together to beat the other team. Not four guys working together to help fill the stat line of one player. I love Thomas! He's supremely talented. But he gets in his own way. The decision he needs to make, is does he want to be remembered as a player like Chris Paul, or a player like Nate Robinson, who by the way is someone he emulates. His destiny is staring him in the face. The main question is, how does he visualize himself. That might decide his future in the league.
To me, this says our PG's both have done a pretty good job at getting shots for other shooters.