CP3 and Harden are established proven players that have teamed up. This is an entirely different case. The Kings would have to develop both Fox and Doncic at the same time. I could easily point to the Westbrook-Durant-Harden dilemma. Narrowing it down, just look at Westbrook-Harden. Harden would've never had the chance to break out into a superstar if he had stayed in OKC. The opportunity just didn't present itself because of Westbrook already as the #1 ball handler and lead guard. In this case, one of the players was clearly being held back from reaching his potential no one knew he even had.
With 2 young PGs on the team, how do you make sure both players reach their maximum potentials? You can't. Not in a 2-PG system. The closest development we've seen in a "2-PG" system is Lillard-McCollum, but McCollum is just an undersized SG..not a PG.
It's hard to find examples that work, because I don't think it really works. The only way it would ever work is if Fox improves dramatically as an off-ball player. This means he needs to become a much better 3pt shooter. This also means he'll need to know how to move around without the ball which he hasn't shown yet.
Porter Jr would have the ball in his hands, but I'm talking about solely the PG position. There's no damn way am I going to draft Doncic just to have him play backup to Fox. Nor should anyone draft Doncic to be their starting off-ball SF. He is a PG. How can he play PG when Fox is already dominating the position? People suggest they can share ball handling duties. How does this maximize the talent of either young player? I've heard some posters talk about how long it takes for PGs to get used to the NBA. Oh yeah, then why would you hamper the PGs development by making him play SG? Wouldn't you want the ball in their hands to actually play that position? I don't see that happening.
Again, the Warriors and Rockets are extremely poor examples. The Warriors only have 1 true PG and that's Curry. Draymond is like a Boris Diaw. He's not a POINT-Forward, he's just an elite passer, especially from the highpost. Durant isn't a playmaker. In terms of ball dominant players, that's only Steph and KD. But both can easily play off-ball which presents no problem. As I said above, the Harden-CP3 situation is much different than ours.
I am a huge fan of Doncic. He's my #1/2 prospect. As much as I want him on the Kings, I don't think our current roster is ideal for his development at all. Play Doncic next to a ball dominant PG that can't shoot. Solid SG who does better with the ball in his hands. Solid C that doesn't really space the floor. Not a great fit. It's really not. He'd fit a lot more on a team like Orlando.
With 2 young PGs on the team, how do you make sure both players reach their maximum potentials? You can't. Not in a 2-PG system. The closest development we've seen in a "2-PG" system is Lillard-McCollum, but McCollum is just an undersized SG..not a PG.
It's hard to find examples that work, because I don't think it really works. The only way it would ever work is if Fox improves dramatically as an off-ball player. This means he needs to become a much better 3pt shooter. This also means he'll need to know how to move around without the ball which he hasn't shown yet.
Porter Jr would have the ball in his hands, but I'm talking about solely the PG position. There's no damn way am I going to draft Doncic just to have him play backup to Fox. Nor should anyone draft Doncic to be their starting off-ball SF. He is a PG. How can he play PG when Fox is already dominating the position? People suggest they can share ball handling duties. How does this maximize the talent of either young player? I've heard some posters talk about how long it takes for PGs to get used to the NBA. Oh yeah, then why would you hamper the PGs development by making him play SG? Wouldn't you want the ball in their hands to actually play that position? I don't see that happening.
Again, the Warriors and Rockets are extremely poor examples. The Warriors only have 1 true PG and that's Curry. Draymond is like a Boris Diaw. He's not a POINT-Forward, he's just an elite passer, especially from the highpost. Durant isn't a playmaker. In terms of ball dominant players, that's only Steph and KD. But both can easily play off-ball which presents no problem. As I said above, the Harden-CP3 situation is much different than ours.
I am a huge fan of Doncic. He's my #1/2 prospect. As much as I want him on the Kings, I don't think our current roster is ideal for his development at all. Play Doncic next to a ball dominant PG that can't shoot. Solid SG who does better with the ball in his hands. Solid C that doesn't really space the floor. Not a great fit. It's really not. He'd fit a lot more on a team like Orlando.
Harden and Westbrook failing to reach their potential together in OKC was all about money not overlapping skillsets. They didn't want to pay Harden because they thought keeping Serge Ibaka was more important. Harden was 22 his last year in OKC and had one year left on his rookie deal. Hardly anybody reaches their peak at 22 years old. People also said Curry and Durant wouldn't get enough shots playing together (I was one of them) and that hasn't been true at all. Both guys are even more scary now because you can't help off anyone on defense.
I think you're looking at this from the wrong perspective. You're thinking each team gets one elite PG and anything more than that means the other guy is a backup or forced to play out of position. Just forget about positions for a minute. An offense functions efficiently when you have players who can move the ball and create openings in the defense and then exploit those openings by knocking down shots. If you have 3 players on the floor who can all create shots off the dribble and they can all make open shots then whoever has the ball at that time is the PG and the other two guys are his shooters/cutters finishing off the possession. Maybe that means you have 3 players averaging 5-6 assists per game instead of 1 averaging 8 or 9 but is that actually a problem? If the team is winning it'll be obvious to everyone what's going on statistically and the stats really only matter for discussions like this. The winning is all that actually matters. Nobody thinks less of Scottie Pippin because he spent the best part of his career as Jordan's wingmate and never averaged monster numbers. or even if they do, he's got 6 rings and he's in the Hall of Fame... I don't think he cares.