You're so entirely off here. Wade's explosiveness and above the rim play is a major factor to him being on a level that Tyreke is not. Wade gets to the rim because he can explode and jump to the rim before the defense rotates. Tyreke does not. He rarely beats the help defense. Wade often beats help defense based on speed and athleticism. Beyond that, the showtime dunks get media attention, which gets NBA attention, which gets special ref treatment. That too is incredibly important to Wade's game.
Evans is not a slasher. He's a rodeo champ. Wade flies to the hoop. Wade runs right past the trees in the forest. Tyreke dribbles around the trees. He's doing an obstacle course while Wade is doing a sprint.
why do you anti-reke posters keep bringing up absolutely negligible differences? i don't get it. both players get to the rim with startling efficiency, hence the slasher label for
both. it doesn't matter how you get there as long as you get there. nba basketball is about putting yourself in a position to take a high percentage shot, and again, wade has just about the same exact conversion rate at the rim as tyreke, so what exactly is your point? if anything, it proves that tyreke is a superior slasher, because he doesn't have the above the rim game that wade has, yet he's still able to put the ball in at a similar rate when he gets to the basket...
so what does that leave? the calls? well, what do you expect? wade is a superstar on one of the top three teams in the league. tyreke is a growing talent languishing on one of the worst teams in the league. its not rocket science, but still, wade only takes about two more free throws per game than 'reke. that certainly does mean something, but its not any kind of major talent separation. here's what actually separates wade from tyreke, and it is significant: decision-making. wade, a nine-year veteran, is much better at reading defenses and assessing his role in a particular offensive set. evans, a two-and-a-half year veteran, hasn't developed that level of awareness yet. i don't give him a free pass on this point, but i do shift a healthy percentage of the blame to the kings' various coaching staffs. before he's even established himself as a consistent force in the nba, 'reke has been jerked around like crazy. he's been asked to play PG, SG, and SF, and has been asked to play any of those positions within a few different kinds of offenses, none of which are constructed to maximize his talent (and/or cousins' talent)...
i appreciate keith smart's ability to get through to his young players. that's admirable. but he's an idiot as a coach. both he and westphal were sitting on winning lottery tickets: demarcus cousins and tyreke evans, two talents of sizable potential. what a ****ing waste with these clowns for head coaches. ya know, regardless of what various individuals at kingsfans.com think, you do NOT need to get EVERYONE involved in an offense. that's the biggest problem with the kings right now, and the problem with kingsfans.com by proxy. everything's going in a billion different directions. some people pull for evans and cousins, some for one or the other, others for thornton, others for jimmer, others for isaiah thomas. its too much, and its a disaster to try and utilize it all effectively. you IGNORE all of that **** as a head coach. you run plays specifically designed for cousins. you run plays specifically designed for tyreke. you bring thornton off the bench as a second unit spark plug and scoring machine, a la bobby jackson. you order everyone else to play a role, and then you appeal to your front office to surround your two most talented players with guys who can help to move the ball, play a bit of defense, rebound effectively, and shoot a solid percentage from the outside...
rick adelman would be having an absolute field day with this team. if he weren't already having great success with minnesota in his first season there as head coach, he would KILL to run his offense through cousins in the high post. he would KILL to run pick-and-pop all day with evans and cousins, who has an incredibly polished mid-range game for a 21-year old center. THIS is how you put talented players in a position to succeed. you spread the floor with the talent available. it opens the game up for tyreke, which in turn opens the game up further for cousins. you DO NOT take away your own strengths as a team. adelman knows how to do it right. he knew how to do it when he coached in sacramento. he's doing it right now in minnesota. its no secret that kevin love is having one of the best seasons of his career under his new head coach. he's averaging nearly 26 and 14. that's superstar quality. oh, and this is the same player who was only seeing 20 minutes a game under former head coach kurt rambis, another candidate for the idiot pile. a good head coach means everything in this league. and sometimes its enough just to have a head coach who will get out of his own way. kurt rambis got in the way in minnesota. mike brown's been getting in the way in LA. paul westphal got in the way in sacramento, and keith smart is following in his footsteps...