I think two of those players are not like the other
When Grant was playing behind Lillard and was a secondary scorer, he averaged (per 36 minutes)…
.228 USG%
.606 TS%
.523 2P%
.401 3P%
.813 FT%
8.9 2PA
5.8 3PA
5.5 FTA
20.7 PTS
2.4 AST
1.3 AST/TO
That’s a very solid, efficient secondary scorer who doesn’t suck up a ton of usage (allowing Fox, Sabonis, Monk, Murray, etc. to still play an important role). And on top of being an efficient secondary scorer with manageable usage, he brings a lot of other attributes that are attractive to us.
- His shooting & volume allows him to punish defenders that pack the paint on Fox & Sabonis.
- His length & athleticism allow us to better matchup against bigger/longer teams preventing obvious mismatches from the start
- He has great defensive potential as he was unquestionably a great defender with DEN but that defense has taken a step back as he was asked to be “the guy” on lottery/bottom feeder teams. Playing on a competitive, playoff team that is coached by Mike Brown where that team is not asking him to be “the guy” could very well result in a reemergence in his defense. At the very least, I could see him put in defensive effort similarly to how Fox plays defense (4th quarter, playoffs, etc.). Let’s put it this way, would you rather have a player that plays average defense through the game but plays great defense in the 4th quarter and in the playoffs, or would you rather have a player that plays above average defense all year long? The former technically raises the team’s ceiling and that’s important come playoff time when effort and intensity is obviously elevated across the board.
Also, I think Grant’s contract is overblown a bit. He’s certainly not paid like a star as some seem to suggest. In fact, this is how his contract looks as a % of the cap each year:
2024-25 = 21.1% of cap
2025-26 = 20.6% of cap
2026-27 = 20.0% of cap
2027-28 = 19.4% of cap
0-6 year max players make 25% of the cap, 7-9 year max players make 30% of the cap, and 10+ year max player make 35% of the cap. As you can see, he’s not paid like a star. He’s paid as a really good starter and that’s what he is.
Grant’s obviously a little older than our core. He just turned 30 a couple months ago, but one thing he has going for him is the tread on his tires. He’s only played 19,603 career minutes thus far. As a comparison, Barnes will be turning 32 in a month but has played 31,036 career minutes. In fact, Sabonis has about the same amount of career minutes as Grant (17,981). I think that bodes well for him regarding how he’ll age.