He doesn't make his teammates better like you keep claiming. His per36 assist numbers during his career year are 2.9. Buddy Hield's were 2.8 last year. Bogdan's 4.3. LaVine is not a good passer for a combo guard. He is a solid shooter and slasher but he isn't a guy that swings the ball around and adds to ball movement. Even the biggest ball hogs in the game like Carmelo get similar assist numbers.
I've only pointed out his 18.9ppg year to show how much scoring potential he actually has. Many people completely miss that mark. Why not use his career per36 asts numbers? LaVine is a very good passer for a combo guard.
Career per36 assists: 4.0
Career asts%: 18.6
Career usg%: 23.2
So his overall career numbers suggest that he actually is a good passer for a combo guard.
Also, Carmelo's per36 asts are at 3.0, while his usg is at 30.9. So Carmelo doesn't get similar assists numbers when you compare the career numbers.
He doesn't rebound. Neither does Fox, Bogie, JJ, Temple, Skal or WCS. We still don't know what Giles and Bagley can do on the boards because they were so inconsistent the last 3 games. By all accounts they should be able to make up for the rebounding disadvantage if they play a lot of minutes but that might not be the case. LaVine's career year per36 rebounding numbers would be the lowest on the Kings team currently.
He doesn't play defense. People try to say well his defensive metrics are bad because he was playing with other bad defenders. Well what do you think is going to happen when he gets here? It's just as bad in Sacramento. His defensive metrics would have him as the worst defender on the team. You could maybe squint and see it working if the Kings had drafted JJJ and had JJJ and Giles protecting the paint but the revolving door that is LaVine's defense is exactly why he's not a good player and it has not improved at all since he came into the league. But you don't see that in any of his highlight reels.
I agree with these concerns. However I don't think LaVine should be crucified for his poor rebounding purely because you don't expect SGs to be very good rebounders to begin with. If the Kings are terrible on the boards (which they are), that's at the fault of our PFs and Cs, not our backcourt. I'm not going to excuse his rebounding because I do agree that it's poor, but 1 plausible explanation for his low rebounding numbers could be because he's a transition-push player. He's the first one down the court as soon as his team rebounds the ball.
Defense is the biggest concern with LaVine. I heavily agree with this. I was very hard on Hezonja for this very thing, but I softened up once I realized that the Kings aren't going to be winning anything next year. I'm not going to excuse his defense. He's pee poor on that end. Fox was pretty bad in his rookie year, Bogs will struggle against SFs, and Bagley looks like a liability. His defense is very bad and it'll contribute to our already bad defensive team. My only hope is that he can improve his defensive instincts under Joerger. Defense is the biggest problem I have with him. It's a risk the Kings are willing to take. He's got McLemore syndome. Great athlete, but extremely poor defensive instincts. Can he improve overall? I'm not sure.
At the end of the day, I think it's clear that the Kings are "gambling" on the offensive backcourt of Fox-LaVine. They love his offensive potential. We saw his scoring potential last year. He fits the run and gun system the Kings are trying to implement. Career stats show that he's a better passer than doubters are willing to give him credit for.
We're a Sacramento Kings team that'll never be able to attract the top tier FAs. We'll always have to overpay for guys to even consider us. LaVine is a player who actually fits our age frame and direction. I don't see anything wrong with the signing. Yes we already have Bogs and Buddy, but it seems like we're ready to die on the hill of Bogs at SF...