longstrangetrip wrote:lipoli390 wrote:This next season will be the final test of whether Wiggins has it in him to attack the boards and react to loose balls. If Thibs can't bring it out of him then no one can. But fortunately, the rest of the players in the starting lineup that I have in mind all have that motor Wiggins doesn't have. KAT clearly has it in spades. Gorgui has it and his rebounding will continue to improve as he gets stronger and smarter. Ricky has it, which is why he's one of the best rebounding PGs in the League. Zach has it and, together with his athleticism, I expect his rebounding to be another area of improvement for him.
Yes, a Deng/Wiggins rebounding combo would be better than a Wiggins/Zach combo IF Wiggins doesn't improve his rebounding. But keep in mind, the difference between Wiggins and Deng is 2 boards per game (Wiggins career avg. is 4.1; Deng's is 6.2). So the difference is not enormous and it's not a huge stretch to expect a 21 year old with Wiggins' physical gifts to improve that much just be getting physically stronger as we know he will, especially with him and his head coach focusing on it. Also keep in mind that while potentially gaining 2 or 3 rebounds per game with the Deng/Wiggins duo, we'd loose a lot of 3-point shooting AND we loose having a second ball-handler on the court with Ricky. Teams don't contend for championships without at least two really good ball-handlers on the court in their starting lineups.
Long -- I'm not sure who here has predicted that Zach WILL become an all-star. I know I haven't. So I don't think homerism has anything to do with this debate about Zach as our starting SG. In fact, I've been clear that his numbers last year as a non-allstar, especially post all-start break, support having him as our starting SG. Most NBA teams don't have an allstar SG. I think some of us have said Zach has that POTENTIAL to be an all-star. No one can credibly argue otherwise. But it's not the predicate for the argument that he should be our starting SG.
This board in general sees Zach very differently from the pundits in the insider article, and that is most likely explained by one of two things...the Zach supporters are right and the more objective pundits are wrong, or homerism on the part of the Zachites. I think it's more of the latter.
Yeah, I don't think anyone said Zach WILL be an all-star, but I was playing off of your post earlier in this thread where you said Zach certainly wasn't an all-star yet...because we all know what that word "yet" means.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYwMZs6eSqo
Long -- You are really distorting my view and the prevailing view of those on this board who think Zach should be our starting SG. I have not concluded or stated that Zach WILL be an allstar and I don't believe anyone else on this Board has. More importantly, I was crystal clear that my view of him as a starter was NOT premised on him being or becoming an allstar. I made it clear that he should start based on his production last season, especially after the all-start break, along with his ball handling, our need for 3-point shooting in the starting lineup and Zach's chemistry with the other young starters. I mentioned that Zach's stats last season compared favorably to a number of other starting SGs around the League. I think he has a chance to become an all-star, but that clearly wasn't the premise for my view that he should be our starting SG next season.
Paying a lot of money to sign a 31 year old to be part of a starting lineup that would then have no secondary ball handler and that would be markedly worse from behind the arc than it would with Zach seems like a bad idea.
That's not homerism. That's a legitimate supportable point of view.