Staggeringly inaccurate. The more capable teammates you have around you the easier it is to experience collective success. As a rookie or a second year player with teammates who have been there and done that (Otto, Iggy, etc) this means you are less likely to be asked to do something outside of your current skill set. You are not required to play extended minutes while being overmatched because there are no better options. You are not set up to fail. You are not asked to carry the offense because there are no experienced teammates to share scoring burden draw doubles and help run efficient play sets.
You are not left on the floor when you are 1 for 7 FGs because instead of having a competent veteran to sub in you have a D-League just as wet behind the ears. It is simple. You want to be around guys who can accelerate your learning curve. You want to go to battle with fighters who have been in the trenches. This allows the relative newbie to assume more responsibility as the coach deems him ready, as the player capitalizes on opportunity given to him and shows he is capable of more. The leash is extended based on merit not necessity. This is why 76ers went out and signed Amir and JJ Reddick. Great signings! Fultz and Simmons couldn't even win in college.
The hype surrounding those two may prove justified or not. When I saw Embiid play the first time I knew that guy was the real deal. He was amazing securing deep low post position and challenging shots far better than Boogie ever did. I thought Simmons was mostly bad in Summer League last year after terrible finish to his college career. He won't even play summer league this year. Sad! As far as Fultz goes, his play could not rally his teammates to more than 8 wins, nor gain the trust of a pretty good GM (Danny Ainge). For his sake, I hope his force and will on the court is stronger than his personality. Unlike our man De'Aaron Fox, Fultz has NO natural leadership skills. Bringing in vets Reddick and Amir are EXACTLY what Fultz and Simmons need. Our front office needs to take the lead from what the 76er did today.
You are not left on the floor when you are 1 for 7 FGs because instead of having a competent veteran to sub in you have a D-League just as wet behind the ears. It is simple. You want to be around guys who can accelerate your learning curve. You want to go to battle with fighters who have been in the trenches. This allows the relative newbie to assume more responsibility as the coach deems him ready, as the player capitalizes on opportunity given to him and shows he is capable of more. The leash is extended based on merit not necessity. This is why 76ers went out and signed Amir and JJ Reddick. Great signings! Fultz and Simmons couldn't even win in college.
The hype surrounding those two may prove justified or not. When I saw Embiid play the first time I knew that guy was the real deal. He was amazing securing deep low post position and challenging shots far better than Boogie ever did. I thought Simmons was mostly bad in Summer League last year after terrible finish to his college career. He won't even play summer league this year. Sad! As far as Fultz goes, his play could not rally his teammates to more than 8 wins, nor gain the trust of a pretty good GM (Danny Ainge). For his sake, I hope his force and will on the court is stronger than his personality. Unlike our man De'Aaron Fox, Fultz has NO natural leadership skills. Bringing in vets Reddick and Amir are EXACTLY what Fultz and Simmons need. Our front office needs to take the lead from what the 76er did today.
But we cant do precisely what sixers did since we are not in the same position in our rebuilds. One year deals yes but preferably to guys who wont be too good to take unnecessary minutes away from kids and doesnt get us too many wins.