Ahh, well thanks for the clarification. So you have your Chalmers, or Lynn, or Beverly, or Collison or whomever, and you're bringing IT off the bench. How many minutes do envision IT playing on average? See, I thought this was the plan when Vasquez came here. He was supposed to take over and be the pass first pg and take the majority of minutes and IT was supposed to come off the bench and have far few minutes. But what was supposed to have happen didn't happen, did it? See, I envision that if you bring in one of those guys, or someone of the same ilk, do you know what's going to happen? IT is going to be the guy. He's going to get most of the minutes, just like what happened to Vasquez. Why? Because he's better. So I'm curious how you see this end game playing out.
i see thomas averaging about 20-25 mpg as a sixth man, as bobby jackson did through most of his prime with the kings. some nights, IT will shoot lights out and log the majority of the PG minutes. other nights, the kings won't require his scoring ability as much, and he'll log considerably less minutes in favor of defense or balance or whatever. again, thomas' utility becomes
flexible in this role. it would be the ideal situation, in my mind, where the kings' starting PG is a willing passer, a capable defender, and a solid spot shooter who knows how to stay out of the way in order to create better balance in the first unit. then you bring isaiah thomas off the bench where his style of play can exist mostly unfettered, thus maximizing his talent as a scorer when he isn't being shoved into a logjam for shots alongside demarcus cousins and rudy gay. it doesn't matter to me a bit that "he's better." a good coach has the discipline to achieve a more balanced, team-oriented environment by effectively distributing his scorers across the rotation...
now, if you're asking me how i actually see the "end game" playing out, then i'd say that the kings will likely re-sign isaiah thomas, [eventually] recognize that a starting unit featuring three 20 ppg scorers who are, to varying degrees, rather weak defenders will not lead to consistency, chemistry, balance, or wins, and will [ultimately] decide to either supplant thomas in the starting unit or trade him altogether. i've bracketed a couple of words in the preceding evaluation for the sake of qualifying them a bit: it could very well be that pete d'allesandro and michael malone
do not agree with you in the ways that you think they do. they may
already have designs to shift thomas back into a reserve role as quickly as this offseason. whether or not thomas is willing to accept such a role as he makes a decision on his next contract is entirely up to him, but once again, malone has certainly seemed uncomfortable with the role he's thrust thomas into by virtue of the utter lack the kings are experiencing in their backcourt rotation...
i mean, you bring up greivis vasquez's time with this team as if it's substantial enough to comment on in any meaningful way. vasquez played in and started in exactly 18 games for a kings team with only one offensive weapon in their starting unit and a rookie head coach implementing a new system with a fundamentally flawed roster on his hands. i'd hardly say that vasquez was given a fair shake. i wasn't his biggest fan, he was a tremendously weak defender, and he played poorly in his brief time here, but we'll never know if he might have become "the pass first pg" who could "take the majority of [the] minutes" at the PG position. he absolutely was not traded because of some perceived failure on his part; he was traded in a talent grab during what has long been considered a transition season. PDA saw an opportunity to buy low on rudy gay, and he shipped out the necessary pieces to acquire him...
of course, there's another necessary qualifier in this whole mess of an evaluation: i have no idea how the kings envision rudy gay with respect to their long term plans. they may very well attempt to move him now that his reputation has been restored to some degree. much depends on the upcoming draft, if we're being perfectly honest. if the kings are able to snag a guy like dante exum, then perhaps thomas' future value to the team diminishes. and if they're able to snag one of andrew wiggins or jabari parker, then perhaps gay's future value to the team diminishes. who knows how they want to continue in this rebuild, or who they want their "guys" to be going forward, outside of demarcus cousins. but my suspicion is that, after the fiasco of ben mclemore's rookie season, the new regime will have learned a bit of caution when it comes to their draft night selection. so we may not see any major shake-ups on the isaiah thomas and rudy gay fronts until next season's trade deadline, when the kings have a better idea of how the disparate talents they've collected to that point fit together, or if they can fit together at all...