Again, late to the madness, but it still boggles my mind how we went from Iggy to Reke to Vasquez+cap space. I'd have taken either of the first two options over the last one, since the last one is still open to interpretation--are we looking to win the press conferences, or are we looking to actually win in terms of long-term viable talent with our cap space?
I'm a big fan of Iggy mostly because almost everything is a strength that doesn't involve his jumper. He's an elite defender, both in terms of guarding shots on and off the ball and disrupting/rebounding--top two for both in Denver last year, and he obviously played a critical role in elevating them in defensive efficiency, from 19th to 11th. On offense he's crazy sick when he gets to the rim--he draws fouls well but among SGs, when he gets to the rim he's dunking more than half the time. For reference, the next best is Wade, and he only dunks a quarter of the time. He's easily a 100-dunk candidate a season, and what's impressive is all the mileage he's had with heavy minutes from the get-go, and he's still dunking like this. And of course, he can play three positions very well on both ends of the court, because his point forward skills are exquisite and he's an elite passer who limits turnovers extremely well. And for a near go-to guy, he's insanely durable. He's played 8 seasons and only missed about 27 games, despite packing athleticism on both ends of the court, so I don't think there's many "Crash" like problems with this guy. That's four elite attributes he has. In a league where most teams strive to even get one, or are very fortunate to get two, Iggy's in a unique class of his own with four.
His jumper is easily bottom ten among SGs, and has regressed every year, and people have complained he's too passive looking for his own shot, but people don't realize that scoring and shooting are the easiest things to get in free agency/draft/trades/etc. It's very rare to get the combination of athleticism, defense skill and durability that Iggy provides. He plugs up a lot of holes in 5-man lineups all by himself, and is particularly optimized by shooters and scorers around him--in other words, he's easy to build around.
Of course there are concerns about his age, but he's only 29 right now, and I think he's smart--he's taking a backseat in usage rate and not going all-out the way someone like Gerald Wallace would have, so he can still preserve his athleticism. And he takes care of his body and avoids injury-prone type situations in general. And his defensive acumen and passing ability are things that don't deterioriate with age, and they're on the elite level. I still would have taken that risk, because there's a lot of stuff that's too good to pass up here.