I felt the same way bajaden did on this one ... some of the names you were throwing out there as evidence of a strong third playmaker being a necessity for the playoffs were comical. Houston didn't have Lawson or Beverly in the playoffs last year and they made it to the Western Conference Finals.
Well if you we're reading along, you would know we are talking about rosters for this year. Having said that, you're missing the point. Beverley being hurt is a perfect example of what I'm talking about. If Houston didn't have a third player who could bring the ball up and run the offense, they would have been in trouble. Thank you for bringing up such a great example in support of my point.
Lawson and Harden playing together could be a trainwreck this season unless both of them can check their ego and drastically cut their usage rates.
This isn't the topic at hand. The topic is having a 3rd guy who can bring the ball up and run the offense. Houston has that.
Dallas has four mediocre PGs none of which would start over Rondo or Collison on our team.
Again, you're not staying focused. This isn't about comparing our starter and bench PG to other teams. It's about recognizing that a lot of these teams have a 3rd ballhandler in case one of their main guys gets hit with an injury.
Rivers and Prigioni are lucky to be on an NBA roster
So players who were played 17-18 mpg during the playoffs for two of the best teams in the league are lucky to be in the NBA? To me, that at least qualifies them as established ball handlers.
and it's an open question whether Stephenson and Crawford can actually share the court together because both are so ball dominant.
Again, you're off topic. I'm not talking about the fit of the players on any of these teams. I'm talking about them having players who can bring the ball up and run the offense.
Cameron Payne hasn't played a single game in the NBA yet.
Very true, but the 14th pick in the draft who is a natural PG is a lot safer than relying on a guy who was an undrafted player who hasn't been able to stick at the NBA level and is a SG trying to convert to a PG.
We had Ray McCallum the last two years and other than summer league, I don't know that he impacted the team enough to win or lose even one game for us.
Well aware that we had McCallum, and he's exactly the type of player I would be fine with as our 3rd PG. As a 3rd PG, the fact that he didn't impact enough to win or lose a game is a good thing. If he doesn't lose us a game, he's done his job filling in for an injured PG. That's the point! We don't want to be in a position where we are playing someone who is losing us games.
Your implication that these teams are way ahead of us from a playmaking point of view just doesn't ring true.
As you can see, I beg to differ.
While I would agree that our roster isn't perfect by any means, if I were to sit down and make a list of what we still needed, a strong #3 PG wouldn't even make the top 5. It's just such a non-issue that it's surprising how much effort you're expending on it.
I might not either, but that's not the point. We don't have a lot of flexibility to improve on the roster in more important ways. We do have the ability to acquire an established 3rd PG.
If Rondo comes back healthy, he's one of the top 5 playmakers in the league when he's allowed to initiate the offense. Darren Collison showed us this season that he could run a team at a high level. He's nearly on the same level as Jrue Holiday and he's our backup. If these guys play up to their potential, no other team in the league will be getting as many quality PG minutes as we are.
Not seeing how this relates to a 3rd PG. The point of a 3rd player who can bring the ball up and run the offense is if one of Rondo or Collison go down due to injury.
The reason Andre Miller isn't coming back is that there's no room for another non-shooting playmaker PG on this roster.
I'm not necessarily saying this isn't true, but you need to post a link to a source if you're going to make claims like that.
He'd be a nice luxury to have in case of injury, but I can also see how a scorer like Seth Curry might ultimately have more of an impact.
They key word here is "might." We don't know how Curry will perform and adjust at the NBA level, and that's the point.
We have three players in our starting lineup (Rondo, Gay and Cousins) who project to be among the league leaders in assists at their positions and then you have Collison coming off the bench who averaged 5.6 assists per game last season. Putting players around them who can knock down shots (McLemore, Belinelli, Casspi, Butler, Curry) was a necessity and Vlade has done that.
Assists is not the only thing you should be looking at. You need someone who can bring the ball up effectively; otherwise, he's going to face full court pressure the whole game and turn the ball over or give his team 12 seconds left in the shot clock to run a play. You need someone who's not going to lose you the game.
In the event disaster strikes and we do lose one of our PGs for a large chunk of the season, I don't think George Karl is going to be throwing Seth Curry out there and asking him to play Rondo. It'll be more of a PG by committee approach where the offense is initiated more on the wings and the PG becomes a spot-up shooter. A lot of teams have had success with that style of offense as well. And don't forget, we also have a huge advantage in half-court sets that most teams don't have -- two bruising bigs who can create offense in the paint.
I'm not saying Karl would utilize Curry the same way he does Rondo. I'm saying Curry is an unknown commodity. We shouldn't risk having to play a guy who is an undrafted SG who is trying to convert to PG who has only played 21 NBA minutes 2 years after leaving college when it's very easy to acquire the player I'm talking about who can fill this role.