khans2k5 wrote:At the end of the day Rosas and Ryan just need to swallow their pride and forget about this small ball bullshit. Use Ricky and Beasley to bring in real front court help. If you have Okogie/Culver or another 3 who can defend with a 4 who can actually defend then Russell/Edwards/Towns is something that can be built around. There are a ton of terrible defending PG's in the NBA. Russell isn't the first and he won't be the last. Towns stretches the floor so there isn't a need for a 4 who needs to stretch the floor as well. The experiment failed. The team is complete trash without Towns because they are just at a significant size disadvantage every night. Turn the veteran guards into a wing with actual size or an actual PF and kill two birds with one stone clearing up the backcourt log jam and filling in a significant hole.
You're right about the need to ditch this small ball crap. But we both know deep down that Rosas and Ryan won't do that.
As for Russell, I wish poor defense were his only problem. But he's also a drag offensively. He's a below average athlete with below average quickness for his position and while he's a good perimeter shooter, he's not elite. Most importantly, he doesn't facilitate good ball movement and doesn't make his teammates better. Statistically, he's had a negative impact on the offensive end throughout almost his entire 5-year career. Add to that a lazy, careless streak that's just plain weird and you have a guy who has an overall negative impact on the team with some really good games in between.
Beasley is one of the few guys on this team I wouldn't trade. He's a good 3-point shooter on a team that has no elite 3-point shooters other than KAT. More importantly, he plays with toughness and heart - a couple other things in short supply on this team.
We need a new owner who should then replace Rosas and Gersson's replacement should then replace Ryan. That won't happen, if at all, until after this season. So in the meantime, we'll have to suffer while hopefully taking some solace in the development of Edwards, Culver and Vanderbilt.