nbrans
All-Star
Mr. S£im Citrus said:I wouldn't go so far as to say that I "like" Elton Brand, but if you told me that I got to choose between trading for Brand and signing Abdur-Rahim as a free agent, it's a no-brainer to me; they're both undersized PF's, but at least Brand will play defense. At least Brand will give you hustle. At least he doesn't play soft.
Your McGrady and Garnett comparisons are flawed, but especially the Garnett one. They would only be valid if those players had never led a team into the playoffs. One year of poor performance, following several years of consistently leading his team to the playoffs is an aberration, not a trend. LeBron James could potentially be a valid comparison, but I'm willing to give James a couple more years to see whether or not he can lead a team to the playoffs. Abdur-Rahim has been in the league for nine years, and he's never been on a team that got particularly close.
You may be correct in the sense that Abdur-Rahim may be a "good player never in the right situation," as opposed to a "good stat guy on a bad team," but good players that are looking for the right fit always seem to have at least one distinguishing characteristic or specific set of talents that makes GM's want to take a chance on him (Webber, Hughes) or, as happens more often, a talented player has to sit behind another talented player (O'Neal, Wallace, McGrady, Redd, Nash, Randolph). Abdur-Rahim has not shown to have said skill set. Perhaps he simply hasn't had a chance to show how great he can be, but seeing as how he's had the chance to be "the man" on two different teams, and couldn't make it happen, I somehow doubt it.
I'm clearly not as enamored of Abdur-Rahim's passing as you are; he hasn't shown that he's particularly good at passing out of a double team or finding cutters. I also don't agree that he would be able to fit into the Kings system easily; his stats seem to indicate that he's a lesser version of Elton Brand rather than a lesser version of Chris Webber. Webber was valuable to the Kings system, not only because he could pass, but because he could generate offense for his teammates out of the high post. Abdur-Rahim has never demonstrated that he has such a skill, and while Miller might be, he's also not good enough in the low post for him to play that role in our system.
Instead of what seems to me to be some kind of desperate need to find players to fit into our "system," I believe that the system has run its course, and that we need to retool our offense. I think that we should look for players that address our weaknesses, and not concern ourselves so much with trying to prop up our old method.
And, as far as the part of your quote that I didn't address, I still wouldn't try to sign Abdur-Rahim, unless he can be signed for a portion of the MLE, or perhaps a sign-and-trade for Songaila. I think that he's going to cost too much money for what role he would best serve on this team, specifically, coming off the bench.
I think you make valid points, and I think we're a lot closer to "agree to disagree territory." Regardless of how specifically applicable my examples were, the broader point remains that you can't judge a player by how his teams have done in the past. Abdur-Rahim has never played with a good team. You're right, even players who are good but are in a bad situation show potential and a skill set, and while the jury is probably out on which type of player SAR is (we'll see this coming year), I would argue that the fact that he's a multi-talented player and a good citizen means that he could probably fit in with a good team. But we'll have to see on that.
As for his passing, I think my assessment is based more on watching him play -- it's clear from his stats that he's not a high-assist guy, but then, he's always been Option #1 on offense and that wouldn't be the case in Sacramento -- he'd be expected to pass more. So yeah, I guess the jury's still out on that one too. I do think he'd be perfectly suited for the high post since he can hit the jumper or take it to the hoop.
I think it's a tad drastic to say that we need a change of system, the "system" almost took the Kings to the chamiponship. If the core changes then absolutely, it's time to change the system and adapt to the players on hand. And I'm not adverse to changing the core at all, in fact I'd be the first one to shake Bibby's hand out the door, I'm tired of him not playing any defense.
But even if the core changes or the style changes, players like SAR are always valuable becuase he can do so many different things. He can play the three or the four, he can play outside and inside and he can rebound. He'll find a way to help the team. As we both agree, it remains to be seen if he can fit in with a good team. But as it stands right now he's a killer bargain, and I'm all for being the team that gives him a chance.
P.S. The benefit of signing SAR is that you can sign him AND trade for someone like Brand, and you're twice as well off. I don't understand why people say that they'd rather trade for a PF than sign SAR as if they're mutually exclusive. You can do both!!
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