JasonIsDaMan wrote:Q12543 wrote:JasonIsDaMan wrote:Q12543 wrote:TheFuture wrote:bleedspeed177 wrote:Having KG and Pek on the books really screws this team form the point of building a roster.
Or perhaps It steered us clear of making a mistake this offseason. At least we know we have 20 mil coming off over the next two seasons when we have to worry about paying our younger players. We Have a lot of bigs, but most posters want to see a 9 man rotation anyways. Let's just hope our wings don't catch the injury bug.
Yeah, wings are still pretty thin which is why Dunn is bound to get some run at the 2. Wiggins, Rush, and Bazz are all natural 3's whereas LaVine is really our only true SG. That leaves a lot of opportunity for Dunn to get minutes behind Rubio and LaVine.
I don't mean to call you out, because you are definitely not the only one to express this, but Wiggins minutes at SG are just superior to his SF minutes.
I also think Dunn's minutes are at PG. I remember a thread on the BSPN board where everybody was like "Now when Rubio gets here, he can play SG with Flynn". Yeah that worked out. And with Rubio talking trade, Dunn is going to get every opportunity to unseat Rubio.
Assuming Thibs starts LaVine at SG, than Wiggins is going to play SF regardless if that's his best position or not. The only reason I characterize him as a natural SF is because he has prototypical SF size and isn't known for great handles. But sure, if Bazz or Rush come off the bench for LaVine and Wiggins stays on the court, Wiggins will probably go on the score sheet as a SG.
As for Dunn, I agree that the majority of his minutes will be (and should be) as our backup PG. But I absolutely see situations where he will get some minutes off the ball playing next to either Rubio or Jones.
Once again, don't take it personally because you are not the only person to say this, but where is this Lavine>Bazz mentality coming from? Bazz is good, and should get every opportunity to prove it because they have to decide to either extend him or let him go/trade him.
Not sure what more they need to see at this point, sans how he plays in a new system.
It's been three years and he's a mercurial scorer off the bench who has a nose for the ball, competes while playing lousy D and selfish offensive basketball. That's not necessarily even terrible things. He is what he is.
The question is whether that fits into what Thibodeau is trying to build...