Sure, Derek Fisher, Mario Chalmers, Steve Blake, Kirk Hinrich, George Hill, heck, Beno wasn't a bad example of the breed, etc. I seriously don't know what you guys are seeing when you watch other teams. If you don't understand that very basic dynamic of ball dominant vs. non ball dominant then the league's construction just must not make very much sense to you. Why does that team play that guy? He's no good at all! Well yeah, that's kind of the point.
As far as Cousins? I assume you are not referring to PGs there, as Cuz could work very well with a top PG. He just doesn't particualry need one anymore than Ewing, Hakeem, Admiral or anybody else did. Give him the ball, clear out.
So what? Are you going to join the confused about shotblocking crew? Why would you do that? Again, the league can't make much sense if you don't understand that trait's overriding importance. How can you possibly explain Joel Anthony's continued employment or DeAndre Jordan's contract wihtout understanding what teams are getting out of them that they value so much? Just very odd.
Cousins BTW presents a real challenge because of his defensive limitations. He absolutely is going to be your guy, your stud. But he's probably best suited to the center spot, and he can't lock it down defensively the way so many of the great centers of the past could. So now you have a VERY obvious fit need next to him, but a pretty rare one. The great shotblocking PF, rather than center. Or great shotblocking/intimidating mobile center in the twin towers look. Daly fit. Ibaka would fit. McGee could fit if he had a brain, but he doesn't. Chandler could fit. Noah could fit. Its tough. The standard great center wingman is a strong man defending strong rebounding tough guy PF with a faceup jumper for spacing. Udonis Haslem, PJ Brown, Charles Oakley etc. But Cousins' lack of interior intimidation adds a tough extra requirment that makes his best fits a rare breed. BTW, another name: Andrei Kirilenko -- nearly unique force that can cover for non-shotblockig centers from the SF spot.