If he can play defense it makes a HUGE difference. Anybody paying attenion last year should know he can score -- he basically abveraged 20ppg for the second half of last season. It was the other stuff that was in question. If he can defend as well, that makes him immensely more useful, and whiel its maybe not ideal, it would mean that you could count a Reke/Beno Thornton and maybe some spot minutes from Cisco backcourt as solid enough for the time being without the iffy never know what you are going to get spells that we've had all season long with Head, Jeter, Taylor etc. He's a real life NBA rotation player. Oh, and another thing -- he has a post game and was abusing the Clippers PGs. You know how enormous that could be? That means that when he is teamed with Reke one or the other of them gets to physically abuse the little gnats of the league.
Will say that his offense is stil largely out of the offense -- kind of wild and a lot of quick shots and one on one. Which of course always looks a lot better when they are going in. But he's still new to the offense, and without Reke we kind of need all the punch we can get. An early question will be can he fit into the offense once Reke returns and if Cousins returns to form and starts eating up shots? That's where he might end up being big punch off the bench rather than fighting with those guys for scoring oportunities inthe starting lineup.
Best case scenario for when/if Tyreke comes back this season is that Thornton and Casspi together stretch the floor enough for Tyreke that he could tip the scale of game balance away from the work-in-progress jumper and further toward the bull doing dance routines in a china shop end of things. Not to say that he needs to stop shooting those, because it needs to improve in game situations, but I'd just like to see less of it. Especially the Tyreke three pointers with 16 seconds on the clock. Hopefully a fixed fascia will alleviate this.
I also agree that pairing him with Reke is, at the very least, a move toward the type of bully ball that we've been hoping for from our backcourt (but have been unable to because of Beno), especially if the shooting as mentioned above can stretch the floor to give either of the guards some room on the low block. I haven't been able to see near enough of Tyreke in the post this season, and for that, I put the blame on Westphal and Co. to go along with our spotty shooting.
While I'd like to see that combo starting on the court, I don't know if we'll see it under Westphal. It's a risky move, because to have both out there, they each have to prove that they can keep the four other guys interested in things while also getting their own. Thornton has shown a bit of an ability to pass these few games (Casspi oop over traffic was sensational), but I'd like to see further, more consistent evidence that he is growing as a playmaker. Because that definitely wasn't his calling card coming in to town.
As for Reke, he's improved as a playmaker this season, but his progress as a point guard has just come to a halt, in my opinion. It's as if the coaching staff just gave up on such a ridiculous notion (that Tyreke can learn to become a PG) and just kept with the 20-5-5 campaign this season. He needs more accountability for the performance of the whole team, I think. And this means more than just dump off passes in the post when his driving lane is cut off or a kickout for an open jumper. Even the simple integration of a more consistent pick & roll game with DMC would be progress in the right direction. The goal at the end of the day is simply a more diverse offense than we currently run.
Just like it's up to Rondo, Rose, and Paul to get their guys going, in position, and to stay involved, Reke needs to be openly expected to run the entire team and not just execute his own game. That's not the feeling I get currently. Hopefully we can get Tyreke back and make progress on this front the rest of the year.
Also, sorry to everyone for the wall