its not about "featuring." its about incorporating. and the incorporation of tyreke evans into whatever keith smart calls an offense has been sacrificed to highlight lesser players. tyreke should, indeed, be receiving the ball in both post-up situations and in off-ball motion much more often. he has had considerable success when doing so in the past. he has also proven to be among the deadliest lane carvers in the game, complete with two-step flair. if you craft a series of offensive schemes in which tyreke is allowed a variety of looks at the basket, then that lane will open up for him a whole helluvalot more, and he can return to being the layup king. but here's an example of what not to do: the kings closed out the third quarter in last night's game with one of the most uninspired 1-4 flats i've ever seen. it was clearly a drawn-up play, and it was utter weak sauce. jimmer, of all people, set a charmin ultra-soft screen that did nothing to give tyreke a better look in the lane, and tyreke predictably lumbered into the paint with nowhere to go. if keith smart actually designed a 1-4 flat initiated by a jimmer fredette screen, then that tells you all you need to know about how flimsy the kings offensive coaching really is, and how unimaginative it is. a rick adelman or a gregg popovich or even a jerry sloan would have a field day with a player like tyreke evans, because those coaches understand how best to maximize physically-gifted players, regardless of how well they "fit." after all, you don't design a gameplan around 60th picks like isaiah thomas, as keith smart has done. you design a gameplan around top 5 picks like demarcus cousins and tyreke evans, who have both the talent and the physical gifts to be upper-echelon players in the nba...