CoolBreeze44 wrote:khans2k5 wrote:CoolBreeze44 wrote:Q12543 wrote:CoolBreeze44 wrote:Q12543 wrote:TheSP wrote:With two more years after this at an $18M cap hit, good luck finding any takers! Deng was one of those guys this board wanted as I recall it, one that we should be happy got away!!
Deng and Horford were "my guys" at one point in terms of adding vets to our former group of kiddies. One for two I guess. You never know when someone might fall off a cliff. And may be Deng gets rejuvenated as a bench player on a good team. I can't believe he's actually as bad as he was last year with the Lakers.
With the price tag attached to Horford vs his actual value, I'd say you were 0 for 2.
We'll agree to disagree. He's been on an upper half defense every year after his rookie year, including some top 5 defenses. He anchors that team on both ends of the court, even though he isn't a high volume scorer. They were 7-7 last year when he didn't play, 46-22 when he did play. Great player.
We can agree to disagree. Great player - I don't see it. He's 31 years old and at times he looks like an old 31. He's torn both pectoral muscles in his career and he doesn't fill up the score sheet. I just don't see how he's the worth the money it took to sign him.
Wins are more important than stats. The guy just wins a bunch of games. He helped ATL get to the top spot in the conference and last year he helped Boston get there. It's not just a coincidence that he's been on multiple top teams. He's a solid player and it looks like he does a lot of stuff that doesn't show up on paper that just wins a bunch of games. He's overpaid if you are championship or bust. He's properly paid if you just look at how much winning in general he does for a team.
That's my point Khansy, he's a solid player not a great one.
I believe he's great. His stats actually ARE great when you look at the full picture, including the +/- stuff, which more than anything demonstrates his value over multiple seasons with different teams (he hasn't had a negative +/- while on the floor for 10 straight seasons and his team has done worse with him on the bench for 9 straight seasons. In other words, we have a decade of data that shows his presence on the floor leads to winning basketball and his presence on the bench leads to worse basketball).
Two-way bigs are really hard to come by and he's one of them.