A little bit more on the Jason Hart trade

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http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=2122950

Hart requested to be traded after the Bobcats drafted point guard Raymond Felton last month. Charlotte sent him to the Kings for a future second-round pick.



Originally signed to be Charlotte's starting point guard, Hart lost the job to Brevin Knight. And with Felton expected to become Charlotte's new starter, Hart knew his playing time would be limited.



"This was not adversarial at all," Bickerstaff said. "He called me and said he appreciated the fact we gave him his first contract, but he felt that the minutes would not be there for him."



Hart appeared in 74 games for the Bobcats last season, averaging 9.5 points, 5.0 assists, 2.7 rebounds and 1.3 steals in 25.5 minutes. In 27 starts, he averaged 10.6 points, 6.6 assists, 3.5 rebounds and 1.1 steals in 31.7 minutes.
 
Well, I'm not sure Sacto is actually the place you go to get minutes at PG, but I guess it beats being behind TWO guys.
 
Is Hart really better than Eddie House? At least House can shoot the ball with some consistency...Hart's defense is probably much better, though.
 
4cwebb said:
Is Hart really better than Eddie House? At least House can shoot the ball with some consistency...Hart's defense is probably much better, though.

He can hit the mid-range jumper though. Not a good 3P shooter, but who knows how that ends up. By his stats, is a better passer. From what I've read, he's in the true PG area. Can play SG too though.

House is pretty much an under-sized two-guard. Like Damon Jones-lite.
 
And Hart will play for practically nothing, and I'm assuming we would have given House at least a decent contract. He will be a decent value, and we can spread the savings on him to other areas. Win-win.
 
My main concern is Hart's suspect shooting ability in an offense where a true PG isn't really used. I wouldn't really call Bibby a true PG -- he's a much better shooter than he is a passer. Having a change of pace come off the bench may not be a bad thing, but in seasons past, BJax's ability to score was crucial to the success of the Kings second unit. Of course, with a guy like Corliss in the second unit things may not be too bleak, not to mention I'm assuming the Kings are going to get anything out of the skinny twins (a.k.a. Martin and Garcia).
 
I think Garcia/Martin will be bigger by the end of the year. Both have said they will add weight, Martin seems to of some already from what I saw in the VSL, and said he did in the Bee (8-9 lbs). Garcia who knows, but said a few times he wants to (even was a rumor going around he added 15 lbs after college, but that isn't known) bulk up.
 
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4cwebb said:
Is Hart really better than Eddie House? At least House can shoot the ball with some consistency...Hart's defense is probably much better, though.

Hart is better at pretty much everything but shooting over House. That's not to say Hart is a great pick-up or anything, but he definitely is a upgrade from House.
 
Hart has really improved his shooting. I think that people who are saying he can't shoot the 3 is relying on old information. He shot 37% from 3 last year, which is a very respectable number and a higher percentage than Bibby (although that's a bit of an unfair comparison because Bibby took way more 3's).
 
4cwebb said:
Is Hart really better than Eddie House? At least House can shoot the ball with some consistency...Hart's defense is probably much better, though.
[Rant]

Analysis like this makes me die a little inside. Is this really what Kings Fans have come to? Have we really reached the point where the only aspect of basketball that we value as Kings Fans is shooting? Is that the only skill we consider to be important? Have we decided that perimeter shooting is a necessary prerequisite to any player that the Kings sign?

You know what? **** SHOOTING!


That's right, I said it!


Can we, once, just for ****s and giggles, consider acquiring a player who thinks that the other aspects of basketball are important, too? Or even, God forbid, a player that actually considers the other aspects of basketball to be more important?

I mean, I've been trying to catch up with the board after having to be away for over a week, and some of the arguments I've read have been so obtuse as to threaten to cause me to have a stroke... Have we, as Kings Fans, seriously reached the point where we're trying to argue against acquiring Tyson Chandler because he can't hit a 21-foot jumper? This is a guy that averaged 9+ rebounds off the bench, but he might not be right for this team because he has an ugly jump shot? Who gives a **** about a ****ing jump shot? Put this guy in the post and let him block shots. Let him get putbacks in tip-ins; Lord knows we don't have anybody else who's going to do it!

Shooting has to be the most overrated skill in all of basketball. Steve Kerr can shoot. Fred Hoiberg can shoot. Wally Szczerbiak can shoot. Hell, Szczerbiak may be the best pure shooter in the entire league: career .501 from the field as a jumpshooter; that's almost unheard of. You almost never hear of anyone but PF/C's shooting above .500 from the field, and this guy's done it his whole career. But you don't hear of any teams falling over their feet to get Szczerbiak, do you? Ben Wallace, on the other hand, couldn't hit water if he fell out of a boat, but which player do you think GM's around the league would rather have?

To echo something that Bricklayer mentioned a couple of months ago, the point at which you start rejecting talented players because they don't fit into your system is the point at which you have to develop a new system.


[/Rant]
 
Mr. S£im Citrus said:
[Rant]

Analysis like this makes me die a little inside. Is this really what Kings Fans have come to? Have we really reached the point where the only aspect of basketball that we value as Kings Fans is shooting? Is that the only skill we consider to be important? Have we decided that perimeter shooting is a necessary prerequisite to any player that the Kings sign?

You know what? **** SHOOTING!


That's right, I said it!


Can we, once, just for ****s and giggles, consider acquiring a player who thinks that the other aspects of basketball are important, too? Or even, God forbid, a player that actually considers the other aspects of basketball to be more important?

I mean, I've been trying to catch up with the board after having to be away for over a week, and some of the arguments I've read have been so obtuse as to threaten to cause me to have a stroke... Have we, as Kings Fans, seriously reached the point where we're trying to argue against acquiring Tyson Chandler because he can't hit a 21-foot jumper? This is a guy that averaged 9+ rebounds off the bench, but he might not be right for this team because he has an ugly jump shot? Who gives a **** about a ****ing jump shot? Put this guy in the post and let him block shots. Let him get putbacks in tip-ins; Lord knows we don't have anybody else who's going to do it!

Shooting has to be the most overrated skill in all of basketball. Steve Kerr can shoot. Fred Hoiberg can shoot. Wally Szczerbiak can shoot. Hell, Szczerbiak may be the best pure shooter in the entire league: career .501 from the field as a jumpshooter; that's almost unheard of. You almost never hear of anyone but PF/C's shooting above .500 from the field, and this guy's done it his whole career. But you don't hear of any teams falling over their feet to get Szczerbiak, do you? Ben Wallace, on the other hand, couldn't hit water if he fell out of a boat, but which player do you think GM's around the league would rather have?

To echo something that Bricklayer mentioned a couple of months ago, the point at which you start rejecting talented players because they don't fit into your system is the point at which you have to develop a new system.


[/Rant]

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i couldn't agree more
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Mr. S£im Citrus said:
[Rant]

Analysis like this makes me die a little inside. Is this really what Kings Fans have come to? Have we really reached the point where the only aspect of basketball that we value as Kings Fans is shooting? Is that the only skill we consider to be important? Have we decided that perimeter shooting is a necessary prerequisite to any player that the Kings sign?

You know what? **** SHOOTING!


That's right, I said it!


Can we, once, just for ****s and giggles, consider acquiring a player who thinks that the other aspects of basketball are important, too? Or even, God forbid, a player that actually considers the other aspects of basketball to be more important?

I mean, I've been trying to catch up with the board after having to be away for over a week, and some of the arguments I've read have been so obtuse as to threaten to cause me to have a stroke... Have we, as Kings Fans, seriously reached the point where we're trying to argue against acquiring Tyson Chandler because he can't hit a 21-foot jumper? This is a guy that averaged 9+ rebounds off the bench, but he might not be right for this team because he has an ugly jump shot? Who gives a **** about a ****ing jump shot? Put this guy in the post and let him block shots. Let him get putbacks in tip-ins; Lord knows we don't have anybody else who's going to do it!

Shooting has to be the most overrated skill in all of basketball. Steve Kerr can shoot. Fred Hoiberg can shoot. Wally Szczerbiak can shoot. Hell, Szczerbiak may be the best pure shooter in the entire league: career .501 from the field as a jumpshooter; that's almost unheard of. You almost never hear of anyone but PF/C's shooting above .500 from the field, and this guy's done it his whole career. But you don't hear of any teams falling over their feet to get Szczerbiak, do you? Ben Wallace, on the other hand, couldn't hit water if he fell out of a boat, but which player do you think GM's around the league would rather have?

To echo something that Bricklayer mentioned a couple of months ago, the point at which you start rejecting talented players because they don't fit into your system is the point at which you have to develop a new system.


[/Rant]

I hate to be one to rain on a good rant, but it seems to me that people around these parts are starting to have the opposite problem, where they want someone with defense and toughness so badly that they've convinced themselves that Tyson Chandler is the second coming of Kevin Garnett, and Reggie Evans is the best power forward this side of Dennis Rodman.

Don't get me wrong, I think the writing is on the wall that the Kings need to get tougher and play better defense (and say what you will about Kenny Thomas, but he's a step up from Webber in both of those areas, ditto Bonzi Wells vs. Cuttino Mobley). It's plain to see. It's not as if people advocated bringing in Antoine Walker even though he'd be an offensive upgrade. I think people around here get it. The Kings need to be better defensively.

But people didn't even want Shareef Abdur-Rahim, even though personally I think losing him to the Nets was the difference between championship aspirations and maybe-next-year. I actually think that was an example of people OVERvaluing defense and losing sight of the fact that there are many different facets of the game, and you always take a great player over a role player.

Yeah, you're right, every GM would rather have Ben Wallace than Wally, but Reggie Evans hasn't even received the sniff of an offer yet, and that has to tell you something.
 
What really is important is that Adelman can look down the bench with conifidence for a backup to the SG position ... not a luxury/benefit he had at his finger-tips last season.
 
nbrans said:
But people didn't even want Shareef Abdur-Rahim, even though personally I think losing him to the Nets was the difference between championship aspirations and maybe-next-year.
I didnt like what you said until here and then you said this. Completely invalidated everything you said, so I began to really not like your comments. SAR has never been on a team with a winning record, he is the anti-tough (ironic you mention this after your claim that KT is a toughness upgrade from CWebb-foolish in and of itself), and as Brick pointed me towards SAR is really a small forward. To say we would have even sniffed a championship by adding SAR is complete lunacy. How can a career loser be the key to a championship season.


I do, however, get your assertion that Tyson is overrated on this board. He may well be, but the pickings are slim at the PF position these days.
 
Yoda said:
I didnt like what you said until here and then you said this. Completely invalidated everything you said, so I began to really not like your comments. SAR has never been on a team with a winning record, he is the anti-tough (ironic you mention this after your claim that KT is a toughness upgrade from CWebb-foolish in and of itself), and as Brick pointed me towards SAR is really a small forward. To say we would have even sniffed a championship by adding SAR is complete lunacy. How can a career loser be the key to a championship season.

I'm not quite sure I understand what you're saying. First off, my opinion on SAR is just that, of course it's thoroughly debatable if SAR would have made the Kings a contender. I do think that it's less debatable that he would have made the Kings better, and judging from his efforts I think Petrie agrees.

Just because SAR isn't the toughest player doesn't mean he wouldn't have gotten the Kings closer to a championship. Are the Nets now farther from a championship simply because SAR is not tough and a "career loser?" Should they have concentrated their offseason hunt on Reggie Evans?

What you're expressing here is exactly the type of sentiment I'm talking about. It's possible to over-value toughness. And if you don't think that SAR wouldn't have been a big upgrade at PF then I think you're guilty of it.

And really, no one could be softer and a worse defender at the PF position than post knee-injruy Webber.
 
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Yoda said:
(ironic you mention this after your claim that KT is a toughness upgrade from CWebb-foolish in and of itself)

i think KT is a good health upgrade over webber. and while undersized, he's talented and he works hard, so for that i'll support him if he is our starter this season. of course, would much rather have him coming off the bench.

and as for slim pickings at the 4 and 5...aren't there any international prospects we can go after? come on GP i know you're scouting overseas!
 
nbrans said:
I hate to be one to rain on a good rant, but it seems to me that people around these parts are starting to have the opposite problem, where they want someone with defense and toughness so badly that they've convinced themselves that Tyson Chandler is the second coming of Kevin Garnett, and Reggie Evans is the best power forward this side of Dennis Rodman.
Not in the posts that I've been reading. That is to say, amongst posters that I consider to be knowledgeable, nobody's comparing Chandler to Garnett, or Evans to Rodman.

nbrans said:
Don't get me wrong, I think the writing is on the wall that the Kings need to get tougher and play better defense...
That writing's been on the wall for years; few have bothered to read it.

nbrans said:
(and say what you will about Kenny Thomas, but he's a step up from Webber in both of those areas...)
Say what now?

nbrans said:
... It's not as if people advocated bringing in Antoine Walker even though he'd be an offensive upgrade. I think people around here get it. The Kings need to be better defensively.
Well, of course no Kings Fans wanted Walker; he can't "shoot." That disqualified him from jumpstreet.

nbrans said:
But people didn't even want Shareef Abdur-Rahim, even though personally I think losing him to the Nets was the difference between championship aspirations and...
Say what now?


nbrans said:
... I actually think that was an example of people OVERvaluing defense...
How can you "overvalue" defense?

nbrans said:
... and losing sight of the fact that there are many different facets of the game, and you always take a great player over a role player...
Shareef Abdur-Rahim is a "great" player? :confused:

nbrans said:
Yeah, you're right, every GM would rather have Ben Wallace than Wally, but Reggie Evans hasn't even received the sniff of an offer yet, and that has to tell you something.
Not really; it doesn't tell me any more than Latrell Sprewell not being offered anything yet does. Which is to say, nothing at all.
 
Mr. S£im Citrus said:
Not in the posts that I've been reading. That is to say, amongst posters that I consider to be knowledgeable, nobody's comparing Chandler to Garnett, or Evans to Rodman.

That writing's been on the wall for years; few have bothered to read it.

Say what now?

Well, of course no Kings Fans wanted Walker; he can't "shoot." That disqualified him from jumpstreet.

Say what now?


How can you "overvalue" defense?

Shareef Abdur-Rahim is a "great" player? :confused:

Not really; it doesn't tell me any more than Latrell Sprewell not being offered anything yet does. Which is to say, nothing at all.


Great, enh, maybe not in the context of all-time great, but SAR's better than just "good."

I absolutely think it's possible to overvalue defense in a certain context. If you're only open to players who meet a certain defensive threshhold then you might miss out on a player who might help your team overall. For example, most people are pretty thrilled with Mike Bibby as a Kings point guard, even if his defense is atrocious. Why? His offensive skills make up for it. If people on this board are advocating Reggie Evans over an All-Star caliber power forward then I think that's a case of looking too closely at the defensive end and not getting the big overall picture.

Again, I'm not saying that defense isn't important or that the Kings don't need to focus on it or that the Kings don't need to upgrade defensively. I'm just saying that you don't sign up someone like Greg Buckner over someone like Tracy McGrady (extreme example) just because Buckner's defense is better.

Also, please feel free to actually respond my points instead of saying "say what now?" I don't think that your arguments are self-evident, and I'd be happy to talk about the merits of my belief that Thomas is a toughness and defensive improvement over The-Artist-Formerly-Known-As-CWebb and Shareef was the only possibly obtainable PF that would have given the Kings a chance (however slim) of contention.
 
nbrans said:
But people didn't even want Shareef Abdur-Rahim, even though personally I think losing him to the Nets was the difference between championship aspirations and maybe-next-year. I actually think that was an example of people OVERvaluing defense and losing sight of the fact that there are many different facets of the game, and you always take a great player over a role player.

.
Looks like the Nets are having trouble getting him themselves, somebody seems injury prone.
 
nbrans said:
Also, please feel free to actually respond my points instead of saying "say what now?" I don't think that your arguments are self-evident, and I'd be happy to talk about the merits of my belief that Thomas is a toughness and defensive improvement over The-Artist-Formerly-Known-As-CWebb and Shareef was the only possibly obtainable PF that would have given the Kings a chance (however slim) of contention.
Again, you said we are Rahim away from a championship. It is hard to intelligently discuss that. Say what now is the perfect responce. And that Webb thing...I think we are all tired of discussing with those who undervalue him.
 
kenny thomas is better than shareef and im glad we still have him. There. Isn't supposed to be about jason hart anyway? Reef is off now just keep kenny or trade him off, whichever is better for the team.
 
nbrans said:
Great, enh, maybe not in the context of all-time great, but SAR's better than just "good."
There's a lot of ground between good and great, and Abdur-Rahim falls somewhere to the left of the middle of that. Let's put it this way: on a scale of one to ten, where one = Mateen Cleaves, and ten = Kevin Garnett, I personally consider a good player to be at least a five, and a "star" to be an eight or above. Abdur-Rahim is about a seven. Which is to say, he's not going to be making anyone a contender.

nbrans said:
... I absolutely think it's possible to overvalue defense in a certain context. If you're only open to players who meet a certain defensive threshhold then you might miss out on a player who might help your team overall...
Has this ever happened in the history of the NBA?

nbrans said:
... For example, most people are pretty thrilled with Mike Bibby as a Kings point guard, even if his defense is atrocious. Why? His offensive skills make up for it...
I submit that people are becoming pregressively less thrilled with Bibby, precisely because his defense is so atrocious. Bibby's poor defense means that his teammates have to work twice as hard on defense to carry his ***. And, I don't know whether you've noticed, but since losing Webber to an injury, and subsequently to a trade, Bibby's offensive skills haven't gotten us anywhere.


nbrans said:
... If people on this board are advocating Reggie Evans over an All-Star caliber power forward then I think that's a case of looking too closely at the defensive end and not getting the big overall picture...
Huh? :confused: What, dare I ask, is the "big picture," in the context that you are referring to?

nbrans said:
... Again, I'm not saying that defense isn't important or that the Kings don't need to focus on it or that the Kings don't need to upgrade defensively. I'm just saying that you don't sign up someone like Greg Buckner over someone like Tracy McGrady (extreme example) just because Buckner's defense is better...
I'm sorry, but no way. That is such a ridiculously poor example, that your point is completely lost. We're not talking about Chandler versus Garnett. We're not even talking about Chandler versus Brand. Who the hell are we talking about?
 
Mr. S£im Citrus said:
There's a lot of ground between good and great, and Abdur-Rahim falls somewhere to the left of the middle of that. Let's put it this way: on a scale of one to ten, where one = Mateen Cleaves, and ten = Kevin Garnett, I personally consider a good player to be at least a five, and a "star" to be an eight or above. Abdur-Rahim is about a seven. Which is to say, he's not going to be making anyone a contender.

Has this ever happened in the history of the NBA?

I submit that people are becoming pregressively less thrilled with Bibby, precisely because his defense is so atrocious. Bibby's poor defense means that his teammates have to work twice as hard on defense to carry his ***. And, I don't know whether you've noticed, but since losing Webber to an injury, and subsequently to a trade, Bibby's offensive skills haven't gotten us anywhere.


Huh? :confused: What, dare I ask, is the "big picture," in the context that you are referring to?

I'm sorry, but no way. That is such a ridiculously poor example, that your point is completely lost. We're not talking about Chandler versus Garnett. We're not even talking about Chandler versus Brand. Who the hell are we talking about?

I agree with the assessment of SAR as a 7. And no, he's not going to make anyone a contender by himself, but he's not going out on the court by himself, there are other very good players around him.

Thankfully that point I raised does not in fact happen very often because all of the GMs in the NBA besides Babcock and Isiah are smarter than the average message board. My basic point is just that if you're only looking at one characteristic when assessing a player, in this case defense, you're going to miss out on the overall picture of what a player brings. There are many other things to assess. People can be single-minded about one thing on this board to the point that they convince themselves that bringing in Player A who is good at one thing (say, rebounding) is going to solve all of the Kings' problems, even if Player B is a vastly better player.

I'm totally with you on Bibby, agree 100%.

Of course that's the Buckner/McGrady example is ridiculous, that was my point. I would argue that people saying "Evans over SAR" isn't far off on the ridiculous scale.

Exhibit A on this board overvaluing toughness over ability:

Kings113 said:
Reggie Evans is an all-star at what he can and does bring (not just rebounding).

The defense rests.
 
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Kings113 said:
Reggie Evans is an all-star at what he can and does bring (not just rebounding).
What else can Evans do besides rebound, besides the basics ie: talking, brushing his teeth, dressing himself, eating etc.
 
nbrans said:
I agree with the assessment of SAR as a 7. And no, he's not going to make anyone a contender by himself, but he's not going out on the court by himself, there are other very good players around him.
Alright, I'll elaborate: Shareef Abdur-Rahim is not a player that can make a team that is constructed the way the Kings are presently (or have been recently) constructed into a contender. Shareef Abdur-Rahim is a complimentary player. He could go to a good team with an established superstar, and become an "x-factor" caliber difference maker; the thought of a player like Abdur-Rahim coming off the bench for a team like San Antonio, for example, gives me the shakes. But, on the Kings, his impact would be minimal, seeing as how Abdur-Rahim, an undersized PF, is only marginally better than the undersized PF that we already have. Not only that, but this team doesn't have an established superstar; on the contrary, our three best players are all complimentary players. Put them all together and it doesn't add up to anything special. Four complimentary players =/= championship contender.

nbrans said:
... My basic point is just that if you're only looking at one characteristic when assessing a player, in this case defense, you're going to miss out on the overall picture of what a player brings...
I disagree. For one thing, you can never have too much defense, in my opinion. And, for another thing, Many successful teams have defensive specialists. Bruce Bowen being virtually useless on the offensive end doesn't seem to handicap San Antonio all that much.

nbrans said:
... There are many other things to assess. People can be single-minded about one thing on this board to the point that they convince themselves that bringing in Player A who is good at one thing (say, rebounding) is going to solve all of the Kings' problems, even if Player B is a vastly better player.
Funny you should say that, because that's exactly how I feel about shooting.

nbrans said:
Of course that's the Buckner/McGrady example is ridiculous, that was my point. I would argue that people saying "Evans over SAR" isn't far off on the ridiculous scale.
Oh, yes it is. Talking about passing up 7 (Abdur-Rahim) for a 5 (Evans) isn't nearly as ridiculous as the notion of passing up a 9 (McGrady) for a 4 (Buckner). On the right team, with the right coach, a 5 that knows his role can be more valuable than a 7 (the afore-mentioned Bowen cited as an example). On the other hand, a 9 is such a substantial difference in talent from a 4, that you'd have to have brain damage to choose one over the other.
 
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Mr. S£im Citrus said:
Alright, I'll elaborate: Shareef Abdur-Rahim is not a player that can make a team that is constructed the way the Kings are presently (or have been recently) constructed into a contender. Shareef Abdur-Rahim is a complimentary player. He could go to a good team with an established superstar, and become an "x-factor" caliber difference maker; the thought of a player like Abdur-Rahim coming off the bench for a team like San Antonio, for example, gives me the shakes. But, on the Kings, his impact would be minimal, seeing as how Abdur-Rahim, an undersized PF, is only marginally better than the undersized PF that we already have. Not only that, but this team doesn't have an established superstar; on the contrary, our three best players are all complimentary players. Put them all together and it doesn't add up to anything special. Four complimentary players =/= championship contender.

I disagree. For one thing, you can never have too much defense, in my opinion. And, for another thing, Many successful teams have defensive specialists. Bruce Bowen being virtually useless on the defensive end doesn't seem to handicap San Antonio all that much.

Funny you should say that, because that's exactly how I feel about shooting.

Oh, yes it is. Talking about passing up 7 (Abdur-Rahim) for a 5 (Evans) isn't nearly as ridiculous as the notion of passing up a 9 (McGrady) for a 4 (Buckner). On the right team, with the right coach, a 5 that knows his role can be more valuable than a 7 (the afore-mentioned Bowen cited as an example). On the other hand, a 9 is such a substantial difference in talent from a 4, that you'd have to have brain damage to choose one over the other.

I don't think I ever intended to suggest that Kings + SAR = championship, I just think that it was the only feasible offseason move that would give the Kings a shot, however small. I think that adding a borderline All-Star caliber forward for virtually nothing would have vaulted the Kings up a notch, and who knows, with the right chemistry, a catastrophic injury to Tim Duncan and a few lucky bounces the Kings might have sniffed a championship. Of course that's just my opinion, there's no way to measure these things.

I just think SAR would have been a very good fit for the Kings. He's a good passer, a good team player, a good low-post scorer, a good rebounder, and a decent-not-great defender. The fact that the Kings didn't pick him up in the offseason means they lost basically one of only two opportunities they had (Cuttino for Nene being the other) to appreciably improve.

So ultimately, my point is that losing SAR is the difference between the Kings possibly maybe somehow getting in the general vicinity of the championship trophy and being solidly in the second tier, which is where they are now.

In the abstract, you're right, you can't have too much defense and it should always should be a priority. Defensive specialists can always help, although usually they help most on a team that has a superstar that is going to shoulder most of the scoring load (Bowen to Duncan, Rodman to Jordan, Tyrone Hill to AI, etc.)

On a team like the Kings, I just don't think it makes sense to pass up a 7 for a 5, even if that 5 is a good rebounder (and 5 is extreeeeemely generous for Evans). As you've said, the Kings don't have a superstar, they rely on ball movement for their offense so someone who can't pass will kill the offense, and they need a talent boost. Better to get multitalented players at every position and hope for the best.

P.S. I agree with you completely on the shooting thing being way overvalued on this board (especially in the case of people wanting House over Hart). I would also say that "toughness" is becoming the new "shooting" .
 
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