A
AriesMar27
Guest
this article is classic voison. the names featured are tyreke evans and kevin martin, but they might as well be chris webber and peja stojakovic. could she be any more telling in her preference of player types? she's got no subtlety whatsoever...
yes, let's blame the 20-year-old rookie of the year to-be for the 26-year-old established scoring guard's inability to put the ball in the basket. tyreke evans has been doing nearly EVERYTHING you could expect him to as a rookie thrust into a superstar's role on a losing team. his assist per possession ratio might be higher if his teammates could score off his kick-outs...
here's the story: tyreke drives to the basket. if he can get to the rim, he scores on most of those possessions. if he can't, he very dutifully kicks the ball out. but in the last ten games or so, not a single player on this young, versatile kings team can hit a shot. i'm positive that the coaching staff is telling tyreke to keep doing what he's doing, because, eventually, somebody is gonna start hitting buckets...
voison is right that the evans/martin backcourt won't work. but that's an observation that most kings fans have considered at some point or another this season. ya don't have to be a sports writer to determine that these two guards don't make for a very effective pairing. i'm of the opinion that it won't work in the long term, and that martin is the kings best and most movable trade-chip heading into the future, so i think its worth contemplating the potential in his trade value. but its certainly no fault of evans that martin isn't hitting shots he should be hitting. evans doesn't have the passing ability or court vision of steve nash, but considering that evans is a ROOKIE scoring guard, i think his passing game is right where it needs to be...
you are right, he's a rookie sg, but unfortunately he's our starting pg, not sg.... even if he were our starting sg we would still have an issue with the evans/martin pairing. it doesnt work, better players have tried. they failed.
