Since when is Tyreke's problem being too big of a PG? I'm not sure where you guys get this stuff from.
His problem is the fact that when he plays PG for any significant time, our offense comes to a screeching halt. Watch any game when Tyreke is at PG and Thornton is at SG. The first pass of the possession won't be made until there are 13 seconds left on the shot clock. Usually it's just to a big out at the 3pt line who hands it back to Tyreke. Now there's 10 seconds left. Tyreke dribbles around and tries to go one on one. If he gets by the guy it works. If he doesn't, now there's 6 seconds left on the clock and he's forced to dump it off to someone who most likely isn't in position to score. Now there are just a few seconds left on the clock and they're forced to just jack up a shot to keep from turning it over. We've seen this happen over and over again. The Tyreke experiment at PG was nice to try out but it's just not going to work. He does not have court vision at all and solely relies on beating his man off the dribble. You can't run an offense around that.
meh. this is the same nonsense that the
TYREKE IS NOT A PG!!!!!!!1111!!!!11 crowd have been peddling since his rookie season. but, at this point, it's just completely devoid of merit, particularly given the strides that 'reke has made as a playmaker in the last two seasons, on and off the ball. personally, i don't care which guard position he plays, as long as the player next to him in the backcourt can do the following: move the ball swiftly, hit spot-up jumpers, play passable defense, and generally stay out of the way. in other words, if tyreke is paired with a role player who doesn't have the urge to chuck every other minute, the kings' backcourt has a chance to sustain long term success, and it doesn't matter which guard position he plays in such an instance...
but when 'reke is paired with ball dominant guards like thornton and thomas, of course the offense is going to stall. that's two ball dominant guards in a single backcourt, while demarcus cousins is trying to man down the post as the king who should be dominating the ball most frequently. it's just an unbalanced mess. though he was a weak link, defensively, the kings were much better off when beno udrih was their starting PG, because the guy understood his role. such a player helps his team simply by allowing the most talented players on that team to learn, grow, and thrive. i would have loved to see beno start alongside an improved tyreke evans and an improved demarcus cousins, with a head coach whose got half a brain...
team-building isn't too complicated at the fundamental level. an organization just needs owners who aren't idiots and a GM who isn't sleepwalking through his job. kobe bryant's PG's never played keep-away from the lakers' superior talents because each one has understood the pecking order, and LA's front office has always been smart enough to assign role players to the position. hell, even steve nash is relegated to a minor role in a lakers offense that features kobe bryant in 34-year-old beast mode and dwight howard. will tyreke evans ever be a talent of kobe's caliber? probably not. but, paired with demarcus cousins, the kings have two excellent young players that should catapult this team forward if the organization is intelligent enough to surround them with
complementary talent. i've used those two words in conjunction with each other for three years now. acquire talented role players (preferably the kind that accept the notion of defense as part of their profession) to complement cousins and evans, and the kings have a chance to climb in the direction of the playoffs...