CoolBreeze44 wrote:I must be losing my sanity or something. Shouldn't we be ecstatic that we have Wiggins and Lavine and can reap the benefits of the players they will become under Thibs? They are both potential all stars. Isn't this the place we always wanted to be? Having a young talented team that can grow into something special? I just can't fathom trading either one of them at this point. Is it just me that finds this notion rather odd?
I don't see where anyone is giving up on Wiggins or lavine in these posts. I personally have always thought LaVine will put it all together before Wiggins does, based on his mental approach, and thus chose LaVine as my breakout player in our board poll. I do also believe Wiggins will be a star. Not many players get to the line like him which completely changes a game.
Where this board loses me is on the Rubio infatuation (which I used to be a part of as Rubiooooo), when Rubio is not the correct player to utilize the attention KAT and Wiggins will command from a defense. In fact, rubios play allows a defense to not think twice about collapsing the defense when those two have the ball.
Also, the idea that we have to contain our roster building to what is the norm today. Sure, most teams elect to play small ball for large portions, but that's due to how rare 2 way skilled bigs are. We should realize that norms vary over the years. What's wrong with getting ahead of the curve instead of playing catch up to the curve? In my opinion, KAT allows us to have a ton of roster flexibility because he can play the 5 or 4 in any lineup (big or small ball). Why not use that to shift the pressure from our team to the opposing team? Playing catchup to GS is a loss immediately. Trying to chase defending their small ball lineup is a waste of time. Instead I would focus on dominating inside on defense and rebounding with 2 superb 7 footers which allows 3 perimeter players to play tight to the 3 point line and allow more shots within the lane. Force that play, allow 2 pt sjots, stop possessions with blocks/rebounds, and force the opposition to play big to combat our easy buckets on the other end.