reductionist, indeed. every kings fan seems in agreement regarding the culture of self-sabotage that the maloofs instilled into this franchise across the last seven years or so. Yet, when kings fans discuss the basketball side of things, that culture of self-sabotage often gets left out of the equation, as if it hasn't played a vital role in stunting the development of the talent on the kings' roster. judging tyreke evans, who plays for a broken, imbalanced team without an identity, against stephen curry, who plays for a fully-formed playoff team with a strikingly distinct identity, is an absolute fool's errand, and utterly irrelevant to the issues that matter regarding the rebuilding of the kings franchise...
Throughout the playoffs thus far, mark jackson has repeatedly built up stephen curry, pointing out to him that he's the best player on the court, giving him as long a leash as he needs to be the best player he can be. Do some fans out there honestly believe that such gestures don't make a difference in the development of both a young player's natural talent and a young player's instinct to maximize that talent? the correlation is so maddeningly obvious. It pisses me off to no end to recall keith smart speaking to the sacramento media, claiming that the kings' roster had no talent that separated itself from the pack, and giving james johnson or travis outlaw the same leash that he gave demarcus cousins or tyreke evans. It's... Ohdearlord, it's enough to make the blood boil. Again, it's kinda crazy for kings fans to fail to see the correlation between team culture and roster development, when the connection is so blatantly obvious...
Yes, right now, stephen curry could be considered the "better player," as if it matters. But, to me, that's not the issue. To me, the issue is how best to go forward in a manner that allows tyreke evans to begin closing that gap. 'reke is a reclamation project with a ton of potential, particularly since his stunted growth will keep the total cost of his upcoming free agency down. The kings have an opportunity to lock him up at incredible value, considering the player he might become...
Throughout the playoffs thus far, mark jackson has repeatedly built up stephen curry, pointing out to him that he's the best player on the court, giving him as long a leash as he needs to be the best player he can be. Do some fans out there honestly believe that such gestures don't make a difference in the development of both a young player's natural talent and a young player's instinct to maximize that talent? the correlation is so maddeningly obvious. It pisses me off to no end to recall keith smart speaking to the sacramento media, claiming that the kings' roster had no talent that separated itself from the pack, and giving james johnson or travis outlaw the same leash that he gave demarcus cousins or tyreke evans. It's... Ohdearlord, it's enough to make the blood boil. Again, it's kinda crazy for kings fans to fail to see the correlation between team culture and roster development, when the connection is so blatantly obvious...
Yes, right now, stephen curry could be considered the "better player," as if it matters. But, to me, that's not the issue. To me, the issue is how best to go forward in a manner that allows tyreke evans to begin closing that gap. 'reke is a reclamation project with a ton of potential, particularly since his stunted growth will keep the total cost of his upcoming free agency down. The kings have an opportunity to lock him up at incredible value, considering the player he might become...