Weird argument.
Fact is that HB has led his teams in minutes 5 YEARS IN A ROW and 5 of his 9 years, which tells you something about the esteem in which his coaches have held him. And I imagine a lot of those people who thought HB's signing was terrible would now acknowledge that they were wrong, so....
Let's leave aside HB's relatively good year and Buddy's relatively bad one. Here're some constants: to date, HB, not Buddy, regularly guards the toughest wing player. HB has the FAR more versatile offensive game AND is the more versatile defender, though I think Buddy's added strength has helped there. HB won't chuck the Kings out fo games; Buddy will. And then there's the locker room and leadership stuff, the community and spokesperson stuff.
By all accounts, teams were waaaaay more interested in HB than in Buddy. The real question for Kings' fans is: which player likely represents the greater value to the Kings over the next couple years? For various reasons that don't simply boil down to a head-to-head comparison, but does include it, to me it's pretty obviously HB. Neither of us actually has any say-so on Kings' personnel decisions, but I suspect those who do agree w/me.
I just can't understand how you are reaching these conclusions. It's just like the guy talking about HB making everyone better but Buddy not and not even looking into the assist numbers. Now you start reaching into the realm of BS intangibles on a sub-500 team like locker room leadership and community involvement.
So leaving aside this season as you stated: Career averages
PPG (not even accounting for the fact that Barnes averaged 3.5 minutes more than Buddy, something you're so big on) - Buddy: 15.9, Barnes 12
eFG%: Buddy 54.5%, Barnes 50.3%
3P%: Buddy 41%, Barnes 37%
2P%: Buddy 47%, Barnes 48%
FTA/gm: Buddy 0.7, Barnes 2.9
FT%: Buddy 87%, Barnes 80%
Assists/gm: Buddy 2.2, Barnes 1.6
Either your definition of "FAR more versatile offensive game" = 2 free throw attempts more game, Barnes does not have a "FAR more versatile offensive game", or Barnes has the "FAR more versatile offensive game" but it hasn't amounted to diddly squat. You pick.
Barnes is a decent defender but let's not pretend he's some DPOY candidate out there locking down opposing wings. He may not "chuck the Kings out of games", but he has also been more than happy to be Mr Invisible, or has half a career season made you forget that?
Leading one's team in minutes also has a lot to do with what the potential back up is. Here's a thought experiment for you, who have the Kings' back up SF/PFs been for the past 2 years?
I hate that I'm having to sound as if I'm knocking Barnes, because I don't want to. I just think fans like you are looking at a career year by Barnes and a bad start by Hield and refusing to delve deeper into the numbers.
Here's another thought - EVEN if Barnes provides more value to the Kings than Buddy does in terms of individual play, if the market value for Barnes is that much higher than Buddy's then you could make the argument that the team might even be better off trading Barnes to get back more in return.