Pathetic half the league wants Keon, but management can't see that. I'm guessing Keon has no desire to stick around and they know it. They messed this up in the summer and now need to trade him to salvage anything. I never wanted to make a Keon trade, but the reality is setting in.
AS for the Kuminga deal, I don't want Podz. I want Will Richard, he reminds me a lot of Keon. Athletic sniper who can play some defense.
Sabonis/Keon/Precious for Kuminga/Buddy/Moody/Richard and a pick or two.
Sabonis/Horford
Draymond/Precious/Post
Jimmy/Payton
Keon/Podz
Steph/Melton
If theyd rather have russ over precious thats fine for me.
This is not a claim that has been made by anybody!
Pathetic half the league wants Keon, but management can't see that. I'm guessing Keon has no desire to stick around and they know it. They messed this up in the summer and now need to trade him to salvage anything. I never wanted to make a Keon trade, but the reality is setting in.
AS for the Kuminga deal, I don't want Podz. I want Will Richard, he reminds me a lot of Keon. Athletic sniper who can play some defense.
Sabonis/Keon/Precious for Kuminga/Buddy/Moody/Richard and a pick or two.
Sabonis/Horford
Draymond/Precious/Post
Jimmy/Payton
Keon/Podz
Steph/Melton
If theyd rather have russ over precious thats fine for me.
I think the way the NBA has went, the 2G position if it isn't a star like Ant/Booker, it needs to be a 3&D guy. The Derrick Whites, Keon Ellis, Carusos, Cason Wallace, Christian Braun, Castle, Suggs,.Why don't you like Podz?
He's been a favorite of mine in that class and there's a lot of skill there. There's some real breakout potential as a lead creator, something we have very little of.
The part that surprised me was specifically the "defense" part. I'm certainly guilty of asserting that Domas is a top-ten player on the basis of advanced stats, but in no way would I argue that Domas is top-ten defensively. His value is in the offensive side and rebounding (which pretty much gets counted on the defensive side but is really a third category in my mind).Given the context, that seemed to be the implication. That or it was just general purpose snark, which is fine. Lord knows I do it too.
I think the way the NBA has went, the 2G position if it isn't a star like Ant/Booker, it needs to be a 3&D guy. The Derrick Whites, Keon Ellis, Carusos, Cason Wallace, Christian Braun, Castle, Suggs,.
I really don't see Podz ever becoming a star. So you are basically left with another undersized, average - below average defense, not a star on offense guy, who wants a bigger role than he deserves. His upside is DDV IMO, do I really want to commit to giving that guy 20 million next year or losing him?
I'd much rather get Will Richard who we could turn into our next Keon Ellis. Those guys are super important, and every championship team wants 2 of them.
If I wanted Podz, I'd just keep Monk in that same role. He's better than Podz. Those players are a dime a dozen, we can grab one down the line for cheap.
Pathetic half the league wants Keon, but management can't see that. I'm guessing Keon has no desire to stick around and they know it. They messed this up in the summer and now need to trade him to salvage anything. I never wanted to make a Keon trade, but the reality is setting in.
AS for the Kuminga deal, I don't want Podz. I want Will Richard, he reminds me a lot of Keon. Athletic sniper who can play some defense.
Sabonis/Keon/Precious for Kuminga/Buddy/Moody/Richard and a pick or two.
Sabonis/Horford
Draymond/Precious/Post
Jimmy/Payton
Keon/Podz
Steph/Melton
If theyd rather have russ over precious thats fine for me.
Why don't you like Podz?
He's been a favorite of mine in that class and there's a lot of skill there. There's some real breakout potential as a lead creator, something we have very little of.
I think the way the NBA has went, the 2G position if it isn't a star like Ant/Booker, it needs to be a 3&D guy. The Derrick Whites, Keon Ellis, Carusos, Cason Wallace, Christian Braun, Castle, Suggs,.
I really don't see Podz ever becoming a star. So you are basically left with another undersized, average - below average defense, not a star on offense guy, who wants a bigger role than he deserves. His upside is DDV IMO, do I really want to commit to giving that guy 20 million next year or losing him?
I'd much rather get Will Richard who we could turn into our next Keon Ellis. Those guys are super important, and every championship team wants 2 of them.
If I wanted Podz, I'd just keep Monk in that same role. He's better than Podz. Those players are a dime a dozen, we can grab one down the line for cheap.
While I wouldn't mind throwing an offer on the table for Podz in a supporting cast role (i.e. someone who is a leading option coming off of the bench or who is the 3rd or 4th option amongst the starting 5, I am just not sold on him being able to elevate his game enough to turn into a legit superstar. And, as someone who has been absolutely dying to see the Kings one day commit to the defensive side of the game, I'd much rather see the Kings reserve his spot on the roster for a defense-first player/contract.hmm, fair enough. I just have a vastly different valuation on him.
I don't think he's a below-average defender though. He's been surprisingly good on that end as a pro, after a lot of people thinking he'd struggle. He's an excellent rebounding guard, he's a 38% career 3pt shooter and he's been an effective secondary creator since he stepped in the league. DDV is a pretty good comp as he just contributes all over the floor. But while DDV ended up capping out, injuries likely played a role, I think Podz has the ability to take his game to a different level where he's not a 4th-5th option on offense.
Essentially this is exactly where I am.While I wouldn't mind throwing an offer on the table for Podz in a supporting cast role (i.e. someone who is a leading option coming off of the bench or who is the 3rd or 4th option amongst the starting 5, I am just not sold on him being able to elevate his game enough to turn into a legit superstar. And, as someone who has been absolutely dying to see the Kings one day commit to the defensive side of the game, I'd much rather see the Kings reserve his spot on the roster for a defense-first player/contract.
Rebounding most definately is a defensive stat. The possesion doesn't end until you get the ball.The part that surprised me was specifically the "defense" part. I'm certainly guilty of asserting that Domas is a top-ten player on the basis of advanced stats, but in no way would I argue that Domas is top-ten defensively. His value is in the offensive side and rebounding (which pretty much gets counted on the defensive side but is really a third category in my mind).
But the point was well-made in my view. There are a good number of major fans of Keon here, despite pretty mediocre counting stats, and to the extent that there's a numeric basis to defend Keon, it comes from advanced stats. All fine and good, but those same stats get dismissed by those who argue that Domas is fool's gold.
I think he's specifically referring to offensive rebounds, which makes the overall rebounding category somewhat of a mixed bag in terms of being an offensive or defensive stat. It doesn't exclusively belong to one category (offensive or defensive) and not the other. I think that's his point.Rebounding most definately is a defensive stat. The possesion doesn't end until you get the ball.
Advanced stats: Good when they’re about Keon Ellis, worthless when they’re about Domas Sabonis
I think that having a traditional PG was important to evaluate the team not to win. And Eubanks was brought in to have more of a consistent style replacement for Domas than any other backup C we had.Again, let's see it. If/when that happens, I'll be happy to give credit to Perry for finally trying to rebuild.
Still doesn't explain the moves this summer. Could the internal valuation of where this team was actually that far off where they thought adding Dennis/Russ/Eubanks/Saric brought us to being a playoff team?
Perry would deserve credit if that's actually what we thought, we end up sucking and then we actually do pivot to a rebuild. Gotta see the action first though, we know Perry/Christie are excellent communicators
Rebounding most definately is a defensive stat. The possesion doesn't end until you get the ball.
Well, no, I wouldn't characterize my point that way. It is true that offensive rebounds don't seem to fit as comfortably into "defense" as defensive rebounds do, but I really think rebounding is an independent skill set, as it were.I think he's specifically referring to offensive rebounds, which makes the overall rebounding category somewhat of a mixed bag in terms of being an offensive or defensive stat. It doesn't exclusively belong to one category (offensive or defensive) and not the other. I think that's his point.
Gotcha. Appreciate the clarification.Well, no, I wouldn't characterize my point that way. It is true that offensive rebounds don't seem to fit as comfortably into "defense" as defensive rebounds do, but I really think rebounding is an independent skill set, as it were.
I see it kind of like this:
Offense: Your team has the ball, can they put it in the bucket?
Defense: The other team has the ball, can you stop them from putting it in the bucket?
Rebounding: Neither team has the ball, can you get it?
Obviously that's not fully exhaustive and there are situations like loose balls after a deflection (doesn't feel like a "rebound") or a blocked shot (always felt like a "rebound" to me) that might complicate things but are less common than your garden variety rebounding situation.
But to me, the only reason rebounding gets clumped into defense is that there's a historical precedent for splitting everything into this binary of "offense" and "defense" and it has to go somewhere. I think it's properly a third thing. And that shows up in a pretty glaring fashion when you look at Sabonis. Sabonis is a great rebounder. Sabonis is not really very good at keeping the other team from scoring. Sabonis' rebounding makes his defensive advanced stats look pretty decent, but we shouldn't mistake that for him being particularly disruptive when the other team tries to score.
And what good is blocking shots if they still get the ball and easy dunks because your big is now out of position from defending? Sabonis is a decent help defender, but no he's not going to be a rim protector. Rim protectors are only good defenders if they can rebound as well.Well, no, I wouldn't characterize my point that way. It is true that offensive rebounds don't seem to fit as comfortably into "defense" as defensive rebounds do, but I really think rebounding is an independent skill set, as it were.
I see it kind of like this:
Offense: Your team has the ball, can they put it in the bucket?
Defense: The other team has the ball, can you stop them from putting it in the bucket?
Rebounding: Neither team has the ball, can you get it?
Obviously that's not fully exhaustive and there are situations like loose balls after a deflection (doesn't feel like a "rebound") or a blocked shot (always felt like a "rebound" to me) that might complicate things but are less common than your garden variety rebounding situation.
But to me, the only reason rebounding gets clumped into defense is that there's a historical precedent for splitting everything into this binary of "offense" and "defense" and it has to go somewhere. I think it's properly a third thing. And that shows up in a pretty glaring fashion when you look at Sabonis. Sabonis is a great rebounder. Sabonis is not really very good at keeping the other team from scoring. Sabonis' rebounding makes his defensive advanced stats look pretty decent, but we shouldn't mistake that for him being particularly disruptive when the other team tries to score.
Dear Scott,
Thanks for responding to my post. Thanks for making your presence known and for your thoughts on the Kings future. I notice you said, "....more importantly in the long term" you will do what's right for the organization. The vets are "ok," but the young guys, are "yes." We get get it. Let Christmas come early for us Kings fans and let's see trades that say, "yes" to the youth.
Best,
K
Cautiously optimistic here. So much smoke, there has to be something to this, but it actually being executed, getting off the vets, etc is what's important. Can't just trade DDR and call it a rebuild. I think of:
Russ
LaVIne
DDR
Domas
Monk
Dennis
Eubanks
At least 3 of these guys need to be gone by the deadline to actually clear the runway for Nique/Maxime/Carter etc the last 2 months of the year. That evaluation period to me is very important in looking towards the next steps
Hopefully all of them get moved. There's no point keeping one year veteran fill-ins on a team that isn't competing (Eubanks, Russ). Assuming he's healthy enough to play, Sabonis' trade value goes down the longer we hold on to him and the closer he gets to free agency. LaVine and Schröder are only taking shots and touches away from the guys we need to be developing at this point. That leaves DDR and Monk as guys who could stay on through the first stages of a rebuild but probably should be traded if possible to extract whatever value they might have to competing teams wanting to add mid-season reinforcements for their playoff run (either as injury replacements or to fill a need for another scorer and secondary playmaker).
A successful trade deadline would see ALL of these guys traded, which is probably unrealistic, but anyone who is still left over should be in play for a draft day deal.