oh yea, to poop all over your argument, he had 27mins tonight and gave 24pts with over .500 shooting.
You're really going to use one game as evidence? Really? One game? You must not be a statistician or else I am deeply concerned where the world is headed.
Fredette is not a starting caliber PG. He is a great shooter who can get it going (which we saw tonight), but he's not a guy you want leading your first unit. To anyone who disagrees with that, raise your hand! Nobody? Okay, let's move on...
And all your arguments suck.
If they are so bad, why not tear them apart? It makes you look lazy, childish, and incompetent when you cop out and just say "All your arguments suck." Show some effort buddy.
You've repeated teh same thing over and over and over again. I've replied to you with the same response.
Have I though? I thought I made numerous points, but since you don't like to reference anything directly from my post, I can't comment on the matter.
You don't understand my point. HOW THE HELL DO WE KNOW HOW MCW WOULD DO WITH THE KINGS?
Oh but I do understand your point. You are arguing in a
hypothetical situation (that nobody can prove or prove wrong) that MCW would not be as successful if he were drafted by the Kings. You mentioned that he would
hypothetically be designated to rookie minutes right off the bat and thus not be as good of a player because he wouldn't get as many minutes since he would be behind Fredette (wait you really think that?) or in the D-League (okay now you're just being silly!).
For some reason, you think his minutes would be limited because he is a rookie. Coaches don't do that. If a rookie has shown he can compete at a high level, he will get minutes. The fact that he is a rookie won't change things. A good player will play and a bad player won't. It's that simple. How is this so hard to understand?
AGAIN, IF THE KINGS DRAFTED KOBE, HE WOULDN'T BE THE KOBE HE IS TODAY. JEREMY LIN WOULD HAVE BEEN OUT OF THE LEAGUE IF NOT FOR THE SMALL STUNT/GAMES HE PULLED OFF AT NY.
More hypotheticals... You don't know for a FACT that any of these statements are true. Hell, Kobe could have been better if he was drafted by the Kings! Go ahead and try to prove me wrong. You can't just like I can't prove you wrong. Lin would be out of the league? You don't know that. Just like I don't know if he would be in the league. It's very concerning that you make these statements like they are facts.
Now I'm not questioning that the way a person develops would be different if he was drafted by another team (different coaches/diferent vets to learn from). But as a rookie (when you have barely had time to begin any of your NBA development), I don't see how this applies. If a rookie can compete in the NBA right away (like MCW) then they will see significant floor time, whether he continues to develop into a better player or, in Kobe's case, one of the best players will depend on his raw potential, work ethic, coaching staff, environment, etc.
This is what I'm trying to say with MCW. He came into the league able to compete at a high level. The development stage isn't even something that should be discussed right now. He came into the league ready to play some ball. If you have a player like that (no matter the destination) he is going to see floor time. The Sixers didn't crack the code to unleash his success this season. They were fortunate to draft a guy who was ready to log significant minutes.
MCW would not get the opportunity and space here than he has with the Sixers.
Why? The guy has shown that he is a good player (fact). What makes you think he wouldn't get the opportunity in Sacramento? Why would our coach pull him after two mistakes? Considering he is a good player, I'm sure he would be doing a lot of things right to make up for those two mistakes. When a guy like Fredette isn't hitting his shots and he is making mistakes then he is costing the team because he can't really contribute too much in any other area of the game, so if he's shooting poorly AND making mistakes then yeah it makes sense to pull him. MCW is a good ball handler, passer rebounder, and defender. If he is making mistakes, he's more than likely making up for it in other ways. That is why the leash is longer with more talented players. Easy enough to understand, right?
Even on that sixers team, none of his numbers look impressive other than his steals. He would essentially be a poorman's Tyreke. He'd probably be a better passer, but that would be it.
I never made him out to be a star caliber player, but he is a good young player who has shown he can be a good starting PG in this league already.
17 PPG, 5.4 RPG, 6.4 APG, 2.1 SPG, 0.7 BPG, and 3.6 TPG are pretty good numbers for a rookie PG. Granted he hasn't been efficient scoring the ball, but like I have mentioned before, he makes up for it in other ways.
The point I am trying to make is that a solid, good fitting PG (who could be a rookie or a vet) would get minutes and mostly likely starters minutes on our team. From what we've seen from him in Philadelphia, he is a good PG who would fit in well as our starter. There's no evidence or reason to believe otherwise.