jthompson1
G-League
If you think a 4 foot point guard can defend some top pgs in the game during a 7 game series than you surely in for a shock.
What makes you think he can't? he has held his own against the top point guards in the NBA.
If you think a 4 foot point guard can defend some top pgs in the game during a 7 game series than you surely in for a shock.
It doesn't matter how well you play...it's the height that define the future.
That is why IT is not the PG of the future.
If you think a 4 foot point guard can defend some top pgs in the game during a 7 game series than you surely in for a shock.
The game has changed. You need quickness more than anything to defend as a PG. I guess the Mavs shouldn't have won with JJ Barea or the Lakers with Fisher because they are too small.
Not right now he isn't.
What makes you think he can't? he has held his own against the top point guards in the NBA.
Concern amongst our Kings fan that IT isn't the guard of the future because he would never be able to lead a Kings team to victory in a seven game series is believable theory but not in considering our 'now' or our trip to Division, Conference and League victory. Just doesn't hold water because ....... Hey, let's just win half our games out this season, hope to improve by four slots each year until we do it or I turn pshn90.
I think IT is the least of our problems going forward to a super team. Long trip. He might even grow.
What makes you think he can't? he has held his own against the top point guards in the NBA.
Guess I was thinking of Steve Nash, the ageless wonder.Remember that time he totally shut down Chris Paul?
I don't
This. Although you are pshn it in the last sentence![]()
Hey, let's just win half our games out this season, hope to improve by four slots each year until we do it or I turn pshn90.
Make players shorter when it helps and make players taller when it helps. Maybe you should watch some Isaiah videos, BRICK.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9vgHlc-kby0&t=03m35s
HAHAHA
Make players shorter when it helps and make players taller when it helps. Maybe you should watch some Isaiah videos, BRICK.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9vgHlc-kby0&t=03m38s
HAHAHA
http://i.imgur.com/e30xX.png
http://i.imgur.com/J1hu4.png
Yes, let's.
I have a suggestion how to make that happen: study the good teams, both present and past. Understand why they were good. And emulate them. Make roster decisions like they have made. Make coaching decision like they have made. Accumulate players similar ot he ones they have accumulated and play them in roles similar to the ones that those championship players have played. Do all of the above and sooner or later you too will get good. Constantly act like idiots trying to do it your own way because its fun or cute or exciting or a whole bunch of irrelevant stuff is just another way of guaranteeing that you will lose. Teams have won in this league. They have shared certain traits. Understand those traits. Emulate those traits. And understand no 5'9" guy has started on a championship team, or even on a contender as far as I recall, in the modern history of the NBA. Possibly ever but players were smaller in the good ole days and I don't know those teams by heart to be sure. Avery Johnson was the closest player I can remember at 5'11" I think it was, and he was a pure PG who was cut about half a dozen times before the Spurs slipped through with him as a roleplayer feeding the Twin Towers during the 50 game 1999 season.
If IT goes to the bench as a 6th man it takes the pressure of defying history off of him. He never fails. You get him in a role he could handle early on, call that role locked down, and have a constant point of stability rather than a ? And the other thing about little guys that should be noted is that they normally do not last long. Everything is about quickness at that size, and if they lose the least of it, if an injury robs them of any of their explosiveness, they typically fall back. Live fast, burn bright, fall back young. the only guy I can think of in history who has defied that trend would be Calvin Murply, who started his career more than 40 years ago in a different NBA world. IN the modern era the only models are guys liek Stoudamire at 5'10" or Nate Robinson. Damon had 2 or 3 big years for a bad team in Toronto, then quickly slipped back and settled in as a 13 and 7 sort of jsut adequate PG in Portland, and never got over the top. Nate had a ocuple of years of getting to gun for a bad team in New York, then his career too slipped off rapidly.
I ran this search on basketball-reference.com: show me all the seasons since 1980 where a 5'9" or shorter guy has averaged even 10ppg. here were the results:
5'9" or under search
There are no surpises on that list. Basically you have Spud, Mugsy, Boynkins, Robinson, and the last couple of years of Murphy's career back in the early Reagan Adminstration. And one random guy from that same era named Charlie Criss. Basically we know the stories of all those players, and we know they did not win anything.
Hmmm, logic, traits of winning, what has worked/not worked historically in the league, stats,.......who cares.
It's so much easier to just say go Kings and trust in everything Petrie, lol.
Remember that time he totally shut down Chris Paul?
I don't
Oh something about the fact that he is a tiny pg. I love IT, I am going to buy his jersey but just because we are winning some games doesn't mean we should scrap everything and trade everyone cause we got IT on our team. Size wins in the NBA, we may have figured out how to win regular season games in this stretch. But looking at the FUTURE, means that we are going to be facing vet teams with vet players ran by good PGs, they would just work IT in a 7 games series. He will be playing with the trees, no to mention on the offensive end you will find those layups that start from under the back board being blocked alot more. There is a reason why JJ was killing the Heat last year and continued to come off the bench for the Mavs. Its nothing against you personally but IT is a nice role player and nothing more, the fact that others are trying to use IT as an reason to why we should and can trade Evans is a little comical.
Go ahead and make Thomas the sixth man so we don't break with tradition back to when I was a boy BUT DON'T MAKE EVAns our primary ball bringer-upper and distributor ....... please, please. And, Brick, I know you won't because if I had your knowledge and research capabilities I could show you that no team has ever won it all with the caliber of POINT GUARD that Tyreke is. When you acknowledge that, I will acknowledge that we don't presently have a point guard that will take us all the way.Yes, let's.
I have a suggestion how to make that happen: study the good teams, both present and past. Understand why they were good. And emulate them. Make roster decisions like they have made. Make coaching decision like they have made. Accumulate players similar ot he ones they have accumulated and play them in roles similar to the ones that those championship players have played. Do all of the above and sooner or later you too will get good. Constantly act like idiots trying to do it your own way because its fun or cute or exciting or a whole bunch of irrelevant stuff is just another way of guaranteeing that you will lose. Teams have won in this league. They have shared certain traits. Understand those traits. Emulate those traits. And understand no 5'9" guy has started on a championship team, or even on a contender as far as I recall, in the modern history of the NBA. Possibly ever but players were smaller in the good ole days and I don't know those teams by heart to be sure. Avery Johnson was the closest player I can remember at 5'11" I think it was, and he was a pure PG who was cut about half a dozen times before the Spurs slipped through with him as a roleplayer feeding the Twin Towers during the 50 game 1999 season.
If IT goes to the bench as a 6th man it takes the pressure of defying history off of him. He never fails. You get him in a role he could handle early on, call that role locked down, and have a constant point of stability rather than a ? And the other thing about little guys that should be noted is that they normally do not last long. Everything is about quickness at that size, and if they lose the least of it, if an injury robs them of any of their explosiveness, they typically fall back. Live fast, burn bright, fall back young. the only guy I can think of in history who has defied that trend would be Calvin Murply, who started his career more than 40 years ago in a different NBA world. IN the modern era the only models are guys liek Stoudamire at 5'10" or Nate Robinson. Damon had 2 or 3 big years for a bad team in Toronto, then quickly slipped back and settled in as a 13 and 7 sort of jsut adequate PG in Portland, and never got over the top. Nate had a ocuple of years of getting to gun for a bad team in New York, then his career too slipped off rapidly.
I ran this search on basketball-reference.com: show me all the seasons since 1980 where a 5'9" or shorter guy has averaged even 10ppg. here were the results:
5'9" or under search
There are no surpises on that list. Basically you have Spud, Mugsy, Boynkins, Robinson, and the last couple of years of Murphy's career back in the early Reagan Adminstration. And one random guy from that same era named Charlie Criss. Basically we know the stories of all those players, and we know they did not win anything.
Go ahead and make Thomas the sixth man so we don't break with tradition back to when I was a boy BUT DON'T MAKE EVAns our primary ball bringer-upper and distributor ....... please, please. And, Brick, I know you won't because if I had your knowledge and research capabilities I could show you that no team has ever won it all with the caliber of POINT GUARD that Tyreke is. When you acknowledge that, I will acknowledge that we don't presently have a point guard that will take us all the way.
I would say so far Isaiah Thomas has held his own against opposing point guards. Per 48 minutes, opposing point guards average 19.6 pts, 9.2 assists, 5.6 reb, and a eFG% of .472. Reke's point guard opponents per 48 have averaged 20.2 pts, 10.1 assists, 5.3 reb, and an eFG% of .498.