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Hatertots

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Posts posted by Hatertots

  1. Today's post over at David Berri's Wages of Wins blog is about our surprising 2009 Atlanta Hawks, especially young Mr. Smith.

    My link

    My favorite part:

    If Josh Smith was this productive in 2008-09, only Chris Paul and LeBron James would have produced more wins. That is how good Josh Smith is playing.
  2. BK drafted Childress (not in the NBA) with the 6th pick. He also drafted Shelden (soon to be out of the NBA) with the 5th pick ahead of Roy (two time All-Star) and Foye (16 ppg last year). He drafted Marvin ahead of two franchise pgs.

    There is a reason BK isn't in the NBA any more.

    Ex, I enjoy reading your posts because, whether or not I agree with your overall point, your arguments are thoughtful and well-constructed. With regards to Josh Childress, I feel like your point, as I interpret it, is somewhat dishonest. If I'm reading your post as you intended it (and it's possible that I'm not), you're essentially saying:

    Billy Knight no longer has a job as a GM because he fails to maximize the value of his draft position. In evidence of that, consider that sixth overall pick Josh Childress is no longer in the NBA, and that Shelden Williams and Marvin Williams, 5th and 2nd picks respectively, were drafted ahead of substantially more productive players.

    While it's factually correct that Josh Childress no longer plays in the NBA, the insinuation that this fact is somehow tied to player performance (since the above quotation focuses on relative player performance) is incorrect. Childress no longer plays in the NBA because Olympiakos- due to lack of salary cap and tax laws more favorable to players- could offer him a much, much better salary than any NBA team.

    In the summer of his restricted free agency, Childress drew interest, IIRC, from the Hawks, Spurs, Lakers, and a few other teams. This past offseason the Bucks tried to sign Childress. But no one can come close to offering him the type of money he can make in Greece. Childress plays in Europe by choice, not because of lack of interest or poor performance.

    On the subject of Billy Knight (this part isn't specifically addressed to you, Exodus), I'm a proud BK hater. I only liked one of his FA moves (Bibby for crap) and two of his draft picks (Smoove and Horford). But in this nine page thread of hate and love, I haven't seen one post acknowledge that the Hawks never fired Billy Knight. He was offered a one year contract after our playoff run (just like Mike Woodson) and he declined to accept that offer. Given last year's success, he might very likely still be Atlanta's GM if he'd signed the contract (thank God for small miracles). But as it stands, Billy Knight left us, not the other way around.

  3. I would love to trade JJ for Gasol, but I agree with the posters who think LA wants to keep him. After all, they did just advance to the Finals in consecutive years and he played a big role in making that happen.

    I thought there were a few good options for upgrading the roster this past offseason both in free agency (Lee or Sessions) and the draft (Lawson or Dejuan Blair). I'm not expecting any big roster changes mid-season, although if they did trade JJ, here's two trades I wouldn't mind seeing go down:

    JJ and a 2010 unprotected to Miami for Wade (assuming he told the Heat FO he had no intention of staying with them).

    JJ to the Kings for Kevin Martin and filler (Hawes or Udrih or Nocioni).

    Obviously the Wade scenario is just a pie in the sky fantasy; the Heat are 5-1 and would never dream of trading a guy on D-Wade's level to a division rival. But Sacramento totally sucks, they play out west, and they have no shot at making the playoffs. They could rent an All-Star, ditch a semi-bad contract (Udrih, I suspect) and set their sights on next year. And while Martin isn't a big name (probably because he plays for the Kings) he makes a lot of threes (39% career), gets to the line (85% career), and doesn't turn over the ball much. Players that score at his rate while preserving possessions (30.1 ppg and 1.4 TO for 2009-10) are hard to come by.

    I don't believe he's a Wade or Kobe caliber of shooting guard, but he could be the player that bumps the Hawks from an exciting playoff afterthought to a serious threat to Boston, Cleveland and Orlando, like Billups transformed Denver into a playoff threat last year.

    Oh, and he's locked up to a reasonable deal. Which is also important.

  4. In absolute terms (ie not relative to the competition), the Hawks' offseason moves look lateral to me. The same faces are coming back and we replace Flip with Crawford, our new bench chucker de jour, and next year's team will probably look a lot like the product we've seen on the floor the past two years. A probable playoff team but definitely not a contender without a youngster becoming a superstar (something I think is unlikely).

    Relative to the East, Cleveland may have improved with the Shaq trade, Boston's fortunes will rise and fall with the health and play of KG, PP, Allen and Rondo, and Orlando's addition of Vince increases the gap between the Eastern elite and the 4-8 seeds. Getting Miller and a (hope)fully healed Agent Zero means the Wizards are taking someone's playoff ticket (I'm looking at you, Detroit).

    When I look over this free agent class, however, I think the Hawks missed out on some very nice pieces, namely Ramon Sessions, Trevor Ariza, Marcin Gortat, and David Lee. I'm not saying it was realistic for us to acquire all, if any, of these players (especially in the case of Lee), but all four were (are) available and you can make the case that each one would've been an upgrade over the incumbent Hawk, especially if you're a fan of D. Berri's work in sports economy, which rates Sessions as significantly more productive than Bibby, Ariza and Gortat as about twice as productive as Williams and Zaza, and Lee as roughly three times more productive than Smoove.

    Personally, I would've loved seeing the Hawks (any team really, but especially the team I root for) trot out a lineup of Wins Produced All-Stars like Sessions/ Johnson/ Ariza/ Lee/ Horford with a producer like Gortat eating up 20-25 minutes backing up the 4 and 5. Of course, if it failed, Sund would be out of a job in a hurry while success doesn't always ensure security, so I don't blame him for playing it safe.

  5. I think Marion would make a great addition to the Hawks, but I remember reading somewhere that his numbers are much more impressive at PF than at SF.

    Broken down by position: FGA, eFG%, FTA, iFG, Reb, Ast, TO, Blk, PF, Pts, PER

    SF

    16.4 0.472 2.8 56% 9.1 2.8 2.6 0.9 2.2 17.8 15.2

    PF

    19.3 0.536 3.9 55% 16.5 3.7 2.1 1.4 1.6 23.7 26.5

  6. if zaza is let go, i'd rather replace him with Gortat who still has potential and even only starting his 2nd season, could give us what zaza did while still getting better..i really think someone is going to get a steal in Gortat.

    i'm down with haslem as a backup pf.......draft bpa in first round...trade up, draft toney douglas in 2nd round.

    I think you're dead on about Gortat. He's another "super-sub" type who has the ability to come off the bench and score a handful of efficient points in the flow of the game and excel in a non-scoring aspect, rebounds in Gortat's case. In Zaza's role, I'd guess he could give the Hawks 7 pts 8 reb and around 1.5 blk. He's sneaky good and a solid pickup for any team that gets him.

    If Sund can pry away Gortat from Orlando and Ramon Sessions from the Bucks, I'll take back every snarky Saer Sene comment I've ever made.

  7. I enjoyed reading that post and appreciate the options that you put out there but of the one that's probably the most realistic (Lee) I don't think I would do it if I were Sund unless I truly believed that Horford is an NBA 5 and even then I'd need more than Lee in return but he'd be a good starting point and he's one of the most undervalued players in the NBA and someone I could see Sund really liking as well as having great chemistry on our team. Didn't he and Al play together at Florida also? I think that if they could get us Jonny Flynn to go along with Lee that I'd probably do it (again if I really felt that Horford is an NBA 5).

    Thanks, Dolfan, glad you enjoyed it. I agree that Lee would be the most realistic of those three, but unfortunately,he doesn't add any size down low. It would also be great if the Hawks could arrange a swap of draft positions in the trade as well, although given the supposed weakness of this draft class, I'm not sure how much difference there is between the ninth and 19th selections (other than their price tags). I'd really like to see the Hawks go BPA in the draft and make a run at Ramon Sessions for a PG solution. He's younger than Bibby and should come cheaper and he almost matches Bibby's production but without the 3pt shooting. Plus next year is his 3rd in the NBA, the proverbial "breakout" year for young players, so maybe the Hawks catch a break and pick up a guy who takes his game to the next level in an Atlanta uni.

  8. In a league where Tyson Chandler gets traded from New Orleans... and then stays with New Orleans, it's hard to believe any trade rumor until I see the guy at a press conference holding up a new jersey with different team colors. But, since it's also fun to speculate, why not?

    Chad mentioned Portland, NY, Dallas, and Cleveland as teams with owners deep pocketed enough to make this happen. Since we're just speculating, I'm going to speculate that this is a talent-for-talent trade and not a cost cutting maneuver. Since Cleveland only has one intriguing talent (and I don't think he's available) let's cross them off. Dallas: their talent's too old, and their youth doesn't have enough talent.

    New York has one player I'd consider moving Smith for (I can already hear keyboards clicking away furious responses questioning my intelligence, Hawks fandom, and possibly my sexual preferences): David Lee. Assuming that Josh had to go, a 26 year old guy who posted 16ppg and 11.7 rpg on 55% shooting is pretty good value in return, especially if you're at all worried about being on the receiving end of an expiring contract poop sandwich like we handed the Kings for Bibby. I hear Lee getting knocked for his defense, but his defense would have to be pretty terrible to negate an efficient 16 and 12.

    The homerun swing would be a trade centered around Smith for Portland big man Greg Oden. It's hard to imagine the Blazers letting go of Oden after one season, but it's not impossible given Oden's injury history and his penchant for picking up fouls like they're made of money. Especially when they're getting back a guy who's only two years older than Oden, got to 500 blocks faster than any player in NBA history, and is more athletic than every player except LeBron and Howard. It's a high risk, high reward trade for both teams. Are Oden's knees structurally flawed? Will Josh learn how to play basketball? Can either player realize his vast potential? Is moving Josh a gamble? Absolutely. But since it's not a given that he becomes an All Star PF (let alone a HoF'er) so is keeping him.

    The "Ooops, I crapped 'em!" blockbuster dream trade would be Josh and Joe to New Orleans for Chris Paul and Tyson Chandler, giving us one of the bigger front courts and one of the top 3 back court players in the NBA. Spice up the bench with a lil' something (Gortat or Sessions, perhaps the return of J Chill?) and suddenly the East is four contenders deep. Could it happen? If the Hornets were desperate to slash payroll, they could do worse by their fans than renting Joe for a year and picking up Smoove's vast untapped potential, but I'll give New Orleans' front office more credit than that. But, hey, it's the offseason. Let a man dream.

  9. Okay, spelled out like this it does look a lot better. But, let me kick a little dirt on the blanket.

    -Who says with the new economic atmosphere that Smoove's deal doesn't look like an albatross this summer?

    -Most guys who are going to be available will have pretty bad deals

    -Ownership might become a seller if we don't win big soon.

    I don't know. I see your points and can see a glass half full perspective. But, I'm also adding a little bit of the Hawks/Atlanta sports karma here. When has anything ever worked out perfectly for an Atlanta team?

    Matt Ryan with the 3rd pick worked out pretty good.

  10. I'd be all for getting David Lee if the Hawks could pull it off without giving up a core player. Not sure if NY is actually thinking about trading him, but his name keeps popping up in rumors.

    Also, Richard Hendrix, a second round pick by Golden State, put up excellent numbers in college and in the D League before Nellie cut him- not sure why, but I think the reasons were financial rather than performance based. He's 250, 9' 1" standing reach with excellent strength and he's available. Could be a decent defensive PF/C at the NBA level (along the lines of Kurt Thomas), wouldn't hurt to give him a shot.

  11. I've stayed out thus far, but let me get in here.

    Ginobili is nowhere close to JJ's level. Mainly because Ginobili cannot lead a team. You're compared stats of a guy who faces double teams, triple teams and delivers to a guy that basks in the shade of Tim Duncan the best PF this side of Karl Malone and offensively the best PF probably in the history of basketball. IN Phoenix, Amare wasn't the show. Amare was a cog in the wheel of a system created to run and gun. However, in San Antonio, the reason that those guys do so well is because the offense runs through Duncan. He is the big show. He's what defenses game plan for. The same is true of JJ. When teams talk about playing Atlanta, their first thought is "How are we going to stop Joe Johnson.".

    Has anybody ever uttered "if we're going to beat San Anton, we have to stop Ginobilli?" and leave Tim Duncan out of the conversation???

    Hell No.

    You're comparing Apples to Oranges.

    Fascinating, as always. Thanks for your input, Diesel.

  12. ... not sure what Joe Johnson you were watching in Phoenix but he played nothing like the one in Altanta and the numbers show that. In PHX he was primarily an off the ball player who rarely played in isolation. He was the fourth option and it showed in his 3pt%, low rate of assists, and low rate of FTs.

    He came to Atlanta and played a lot of point guard in his first season, got to be more of a scorer in his second season while we let other people bring the ball up and initiate to offense, then last season he went back to a de facto pg until we brought in Bibby and Joe got to play to his strengths again.

    I find it odd that you refute the argument that Johnson would play better with a point guard and use as your example his play with a different team and coach entirely when you have empirical evidence from his play with and without a pg during the exact same season with the exact same surrounding players. Please explain why plugging Bibby in and keeping the rest of the context the same is less valid to you than going back in time to when Joe was a 22/23 year old fourth option in a different system.

    Also the "one season spike" in his 3pt% was the only season he played with Nash, that was also borne out in his time playing next to Bibby. One of Joe's biggest strengths is his jumpshot but its hard to be accurate when you always have a hand in your face. For someone who seems to value shooting efficiency you seem awfully keen to ignore the fact that Joe, next to a good pg (be it Nash or Bibby) has shown the ability to knock down the trey at a rate that most SGs would kill for.

    Crimedog-

    The only thing I'm keen to do is discuss basketball. You claimed in an earlier post that if JJ didn't have ball handling responsibilities or didn't have to face double teams, he would be 'fresh' and be more productive like Manu Ginobili, who has a point guard in Parker and a low post threat who faces double teams in Duncan. Presumably, your point is that acquiring Duncan would make Joe a more efficient player. I pointed out a situation in which Joe played with an MVP point guard and a huge offensive threat in Amare, yet Joe offered nowhere near the scoring efficiency that Manu does.

    For his career, Joe has produced a shade over one point per shot attempt (about 1.18 in seasons where he's gotten 35+ minutes), regardless of the talent level or skill set of his teammates. Therefore, I'm skeptical of any claim that Joe's efficiency can be raised by adding Duncan. According to that argument, we should have expected a huge decrease in Joe's scoring efficiency when he left Phoenix for Atlanta, but that never happened.

  13. I think you are taking player's stats out of context and using that to decide who is better. I do think that Manu is at least as good as Joe but I wouldn't use season stats to judge. Manu gets to play 31 minutes a game, he is always fresh. Manu doesn't face doubles, he doesn't have the offense run through him on every play. It is easy to be explosive when you aren't always handling the ball, no? Similar to Parker, no one can stay in front of him but its harder to stay in front of a guy when you are constantly in recovery from doubling/tripling a 2-time MVP low post behemoth. Look what happens to Joe when he doesn't have to be the de facto point - guard he goes off. Look what happened once Bibby got here: around 24-7 with astonishing accuracy from 3. Hell, look what happened to Smith once Bibby got here, he got to become more of a finisher, upped his FG% and cut down his TOs by one full loss a game.

    Its easier to be efficient when you are put in a position to be efficient.

    I don't think it assures us of a title by any means, but any team Duncan is on is going to be talked about as a title contender and for good reason. You can't say the same about Josh/Joe/Al.

    Crimedog-

    The only thing I can look at is what they did in the games. And in the games they played last season (and every other season) Manu was the more productive shooting guard.

    The argument that Joe would play better if he had a better point handling the ball and didn't face so many double teams gets thrown around a lot. What you might find surprising is that in Phoenix, where JJ played under those exact ideal conditions, his numbers hardly changed at all. Atlanta Joe takes more shots and, as a result, scores more points than Phoenix Joe and Atl Joe gets slightly fewer rebounds than Phx Joe (I'm guessing that pace accounts for this marginal difference) but any way you slice it, there's no evidence that Joe was a radically better player when he played with Nash, Amare, and Marion. His scoring efficiency was basically the same (with the exception of a one season spike in 3p%, and even that had less impact on his points per shot than I would've thought).

    Joe Johnson, regardless of the jersey on his back and the teammates at his side, has played like Joe Johnson throughout his career.

  14. You are ignoring what happened in the playoffs as much as he is by saying that since the Spurs lost to LA and LA lost to Boston, Tim Duncan couldn't lead us to a title.

    That Spurs team is built around 3 players, with Manu being out, they couldn't hold a lead down the stretch and gave up two big ones. You pointed out that the Hawks losses were blowouts, there was one blowout apeice in the SA-LAL series and 3 single digit losses.

    Duncan is still a good enough player to lead a team to a title, still arguably the most effective defensive force in the game, and still has the ability to be a go-to offensive guy. Manu might be better than Joe in limited minutes but he can't play the whole game like Joe can, its a wash in that regard... Parker is better than Bibby but Smith is better than Oberto and Marvin is, at worst, on par with Bowen.

    The playoffs are about matchups and having Duncan would make us one of the toughest matchups in the east, if we make it out of the east... well, Duncan's record is 4-0 in finals series.

    What teams, based on roster talent (not extrapolation from "so and so beat so and so, so we wouldn't be as good"), would be stronger than a Hawks team starring Duncan, JJ, and Smith with Bibby and Marvin?

    Joe needs something like 6 more possessions than Manu to get 20 points. Six possessions that could (and probably would) go to Duncan instead. Plus, Manu gets more rebounds and steals. I don't think it's even close between those two guys once you take efficiency and possession advantage into account. Smith does some really great things on the court and he does some really horrible things with all those ugly turnovers he commits and his poor shot selection. I'm of the opinion that Atlanta's best players are somewhat overrated, especially considering how few games those players have won the past few seasons.

    Based on roster talent, I'd take L.A. (if Bynum comes back healthy, they go from better to much better than a Duncan-led Atlanta squad) and Boston still has KG, a talent equal to TD, and Paul Pierce, who I think is much better than Atlanta's second best player. They also have Rondo, who made Bibby look bad.

    Those are the two teams that I think would clearly be better than the Hawks. New Orleans, which got rid of the terrible Jannero Pargo and added a good player in James Posey, is at least as good as that Hawks team. Dallas (Nowitski, Kidd, Howard, Diop) and Utah (Boozer, Williams, Okur, Kirilenko, Milsap) would be close, too. And Detroit is still an elite team that we couldn't just walk through if we met in the playoffs.

    If we had signed someone like Baron Davis in the offseason, then sure, make that trade. But I think we come up short of being a frontrunner, and I wouldn't want to sacrifice Al just to be a top 5 team that ends up as an also ran.

  15. It indeed was a test, but the test wasn't would you make the trade. The question is are you ready to win a championship now. HT, I think your post exemplifies what it is about Squawkers that is "Welfare minded" as I have called it previously. Us getting Duncan in the east would guarantee that we go to the Finals. However, instead of looking at us getting to the finals... right now this year, you're more concerned about what will happen in 4 to 5 years... and actually, you think it's better to lounge in mediocrity or something close until Horf and others come around instead of winning now. What they didn't tell you at the meeting is winning now (championship) solves most problems. How many Championship teams waited for the development of several drafted players without making a major trade? The answer is none but San Antonio. A trade of Horf for Duncan is just like Jefferson for KG. I think it would have the same results.

    So what you're saying is that JJ, Smoove, Marvin, and Bibby < Manu, Parker, and Bowen?

    And...

    We are talking about playing in the East!!!

    So the team that took Boston to 7 games with Horford at C could not beat Boston with Duncan replacing Horford?

    WOW. sad.gif

    Diesel-

    1. If I thought trading Al Horford would net the Hawks just the one championship next year, without hesitation, he's gone. I'll help him pack his bags. Let me be clear, I love Al Horford, but I love titles more. I just don't think this trade makes the Hawks a clear favorite to win the title.

    2. Didn't I propose another trade, with the Lakers for Bynum, that I felt did give us the chance to contend for a title? How is trading for a kid with superstar potential when healthy somehow an acceptance of mediocrity?

    3. I'm saying next year, adding Tim Duncan and subtracting Al Horford makes us the third or fourth best team in the league. That's the basis for not making the trade. We'd be much better, but not good enough. And that's the worst place to end up after making one of these trades.

    4. The Hawks team that took Boston to seven games got its collective anus blown out in every road game. That team also lost its best bench player this offseason. Sure, Tim makes it a more competitive series, he's a much better player than Al. But is he 25 or 30 more points than Horford on the road against one of the top defenses in the league better? After all, the Spurs lost to L.A., who in turn got killed by Boston.

    But if you're going to ignore, ya know, what actually happened in the playoffs and just declare that putting Duncan next to JJ (who actually isn't as good as Manu) and Bibby (worse than Tony Parker) makes the Hawks the de facto favorites to win the title and that Boston or L.A. or New Orleans or even Detroit won't have anything to say about it, then man, do us all a solid and not call anyone else a homer ever again.

  16. hatertots, you didn't say why D's initial trade didn't make sense for both sides.

    The ideal situation, obviously, would be for a young cornerstone like the trade you proposed. Unfortunately, no team is going to trade one young player for a young player with less ability and potential. The reason this question has any intrigue is that you could get a career of Horford, who is a nice peice but not a championship cornerstone, or a few years of Duncan.

    The trade with S.A. doesn't make sense to me because I think we'd be grabbing an aging vet and going into win now mode without the horses to win an NBA title. We're kinda like the Mavericks after that trade, a 50 win team that has next to no chance at winning it all. Boston and L.A. and New Orleans would all still be ahead of us, IMO. And I can't see the Spurs pulling the plug on their All-Star trio because that is a step back over the next few years, which is all that team has. To me, the trade proposal seems disjointed from the standpoint of both rosters.

  17. Diesel-

    Personally, I don't think the trade with San Antonio makes sense, for either team, so I couldn't see making the deal. However, a deal for a younger player might be something I'd go for since the window would be longer, Detroit and Boston would see their squads get weaker with age, and we as fans could hopefully get more than 2-3 years of playoff basketball. Some people mentioned Dwight Howard, but we all know he isn't leaving Orlando any time soon.

    But would you trade Al Horford for Andrew Bynum?

    I think Andrew is easily the better player of the two, but he's coming off an injury that was thought to be minor at the time, but that was in January and the timetable for his return kept getting pushed back and now it's not certain how much the injury will affect his game. Normally, a guy like Bynum would be unavailable, but in situations like this, it's possible a team would be willing to deal a guy they normally wouldn't.

    IMO, that's a pretty intriguing swap for both teams. For the Hawks, this trade would net them a very young player (just like the rest of the squad) who, if healthy, makes them a much better team. He's made huge strides in his time in the league, and while some have knocked his work ethic or his desire to get better, the fact that he has improved so much makes those comments seem pretty baseless. The real risk is that the guy might never fully recover or that he might be injury prone throughout his career. But the reward is that he could also end up being just as good as Dwight in a few years.

    On the other side, L.A. already has a championship caliber team, with or without Bynum. Adding Horford to the Lakers gives them a young big with leadership skills beyond his years who rebounds, scores efficiently and is a likable, handsome fella. In other words, he's a perfect fit for Los Angeles (the team and the city) and I think he puts them over the top in their quest for another title. Plus, since Horford isn't a threat to go 23 and 11 Shaqtastic, no one's gonna say the title wasn't all Kobe's doing.

    It's a risk, but in the best case scenario, we get a young big who shows legit superstar potential to build a contender around in the East and L.A. wins another championship. Doesn't get much better than that.

    So, would you trade Horford for Bynum?

  18. Nick Fazekas are you joking? He was the reason they made the movie White Man Can't Jump.

    Lol, I thought the point of being tall is that you don't have to jump, Frank!

    Seriously though, Fazekas posted great college numbers (albeit in a weak conference) and once he caught on in LA he averaged nearly 5 ppg on 57% shooting and snagged nearly 4 rpg in just under 12 mpg. He doesn't have the bulk yet, only 235. I'd love to see him get 10-15 minutes a game in Atlanta's big rotation and see what he can bring. I'm always intrigued by a guy who has good shot selection and hits the glass (especially at the low price that Fazekas will fetch). Childress was the only player on Atlanta's bench with those skills last year.

    I think he could be a player in the mold of NY's David Lee, not flashy but effective. Whichever team gives him an opportunity will be making a low-risk investment that could pay off handsomely in on-court production. I wish the Hawks would take that risk.

  19. If you don't see them as an upgrade over the scrubs Miami has, then I'm seriously wasting my time.

    Peja is a 16/4 player, who's one of the league's best shooters. He's someone who spreads the floor for Paul and West to do their thing.

    Bonzi Wells is a 9/3 player who shot 49% from the field.

    Mo Pete is a 8/3 player who shot 40% from the 3.

    Pargo is a solid guard, and arguably better than any guard on the Heat's roster not named Wade.

    Seriously man, I know everyone has their own opinion. However, you're are seriously in denial if you think that Paul, West, and Chandler didn't have a good team built around them. When your star players are PGs and Bigs, you need people to hit shots to spread the floor so they can go to work.

    You're participating in an internet discussion forum, there's no doubt you're wasting your time.

    That said, yes, those guys are all pretty good from behind the arc. Is there anything else they do that you like about their respective games, Eazy?

    Personally, I think Paul's outstanding play has to do with the fact that he happens to be one of the 10 best basketball players on planet Earth. Taking Peja off the team won't change that, so I don't think we can credit him with much (if any) of Paul's success. And the fact that not one team ponied up for Pargo's services tells me all I need to know about how solid he is as a guard, but I still looked it up anyway.

    Jannero Pargo averaged 8.1 ppg on 39% shooting last year (34% from 3) and was horrific in every other category: 1.6 rb, 2.4 ast, and < 1 blk and stl per game. Compare that with Miami's Chris Quinn, also a guard, who scored 7.8 ppg on 42% shooting (40% from 3) and also chipped in more assists, rebounds and steals.

    Objectively, neither is great, although Quinn is a 2nd year player who was much improved from his rookie year while Pargo is a 6 year vet. But you like Pargo and dislike the marginally superior Quinn, and it seems others on this board share that opinion. Why?

    Because Jannero Pargo played four good games against Dallas in the playoffs and we all saw those games. Hell, I thought Pargo was really good too until I looked up his career numbers, which stink.

    I'd love to provide you other examples of how New Orleans is a very top heavy team in terms of talent, but I won't waste any more of your time, Eazy.

  20. Pargo, Peja, Mo. Pete, and Bonzi are great roleplayers. Julian Wright is also a young player. So, yes, even the Hornets big three have a significantly better supporting cast than the Heat have.

    Speaking of Phoenix and "system guys", How can you explain Steve Nash's emergence in Phoenix ? He definitely wasn't MVP material in Dallas. Did he just make vast improvements so late in his career ?

    The NBA made hand checking illegal in the early part of this decade. This rule change has generally enhanced the value of guard play, and Steve Nash has particularly benefited from it. The Mavericks also didn't think Nash was MVP material, but they grossly underestimated the impact of the change, which made Nash a top 3 PG. This miscalculation probably cost the Mavs a title.

    This rule change is also the reason why I cringe whenever I see those "Player X is as good as MJ" articles.

    Peja I do like, though he's basically a one-dimensional shooter type. And Bonzi and Wright were alright, but they hardly played. If you don't play, you can't really make too big of an impact. Peterson doesn't offer much other than 3pt shooting. Pargo is a marginal NBA talent; isn't he out of the league now? I don't really see those guys as too big of an upgrade from what Miami has.

    Eazy, what do you look for in a good roleplayer? Personally, I don't like bench guys who need to take shots (with notable exceptions like Manu Ginobili). I like roleplayers who offer efficient, opportunistic scoring and possession advantage (rebounds), which leads to more scoring opportunities for people I actually do want taking shots. Those guys tend to be the cheapest in terms of contract cost and they offer lots of value. Guys like Carl Landry of the Rockets or the Spurs' Kurt Thomas. People call them 'energy' guys, a term that seems almost synonymous with 'doesn't waste possessions with bad shots and comes up with the ball a lot.' Ben Wallace started off as an energy guy and ended up being a major contributor to that championship Pistons squad.

    I think many NBA teams would be better off trying to fill their benches with those types of players, rather than trying to fix their scoring deficiencies with shooters who couldn't crack the starting rotation of another team. IMO, that just makes the problem worse.

  21. Other than Wade, I'd want Manu Ginobili on the Hawks. His outside shooting is terrific, hard to stop when going left, good defender and he picks up lots of offensive fouls with his floppery (which I might have a different opinion on if he played for Atlanta).

  22. Marion shot such a good percentage playing with Steve Nash and Amare Stoudemire in a shooting oriented system. When he came to a Miami, he was just as bad a shooter as Josh Smith. Not only did his 3pt% drop off significantly, so did his FG%. He's just not a second option in a working offense, at least not anymore. Jason Williams was a solid point, and a great ball handler. He made Wade's job a whole lot easier. The probable reason people are "sleeping" on Miami is because everyone knows that a basketball team is more than 3 people. Every team you mentioned with 3 star players had a good cast of roleplayers around them. You seem to forget this is a team game. After playing only 102/164 games, it's pretty safe to say Wade is injury prone. Whether it's his knee, shoulder, funny bone, or spleen, I think he'll get hurt next year. So then what ? Also, you have to play all your stars 48 minutes a game, because that's the only way they'll get out of their spot as one of the worst teams in the league. The bottom line is the Heat are just not a good team as they are currently constructed.

    Eazy, I have to disagree with your claim that every good team I mentioned from last year had a solid supporting cast. Outside of their top 3, New Orleans was one of the worst teams in the NBA, and yet they won, if I recall correctly, 56 games last season and finished second out west. So, while it is a team game, clearly the best players have a disproportionate influence on the outcomes, and that's to be expected. The best players play the most minutes, they take the most shots, etc. If Chipper could take every third at bat, you'd expect the Braves to be a much better hitting team, even if they had a couple of scrubs who hit below the Mendoza line, right? That's effectively how it is in basketball. You can go the entire game without letting Smush Parker take a shot (an advisable strategy).

    Also, Marion injured his back toward the end of last season, limiting his effectiveness. However, before that, he averaged over 16 points and 10 rebounds on 49% shooting (33% from downtown). And he threw in 3 steals. Very Matrix-like numbers. So it doesn't seem to me like Marion is a 'system guy,' a label that can be more accurately applied to NFL players. Basketball players tend to be who they are, regardless of teammates, coaches, or styles of play. In fact, I wrote a post about this during JJ's slump last year comparing his Phoenix numbers to his Atlanta numbers. Apart from a one year spike in his 3pt %, they're virtually identical, even more so if you adjust for pace, which I did not.

    I agree that Wade is injury prone, though. It's to be expected with the way he gets punished taking it to the rim. But, as they say, you go to war with the army you have, not the army you wish you had.

    Anyhow, I know this thread is supposed to be about the Hawks and their SI ranking and not Miami's, so I'll quit going off on this tangent. I don't know how I ended up getting so sucked into this, I don't even like the damn Heat.

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