slimcalhoun27 wrote:What kind of evaluation at PG did he actually have? He had zero support during that time besides for Shabazz who is not a catch and shoot player, or Wiggins? No Rubio, Martin, Pek, Brewer was being traded, Mo was injured a bit, and so was everyone's else during that time.
I'm not saying he would have done any worse, but for God sakes, kid had very little supporting cast at the time. Tough to gauge him at all. I like his skill set, just need one more off season of strength training, bulking up, working on his skill and playing more.
It doesn't take a professional scout to see basic things he's unable to execute that you would expect of a point guard at almost any higher level of basketball, regardless of who he's playing with:
- Picks up his dribble before having someone to pass to.
- Passes into double-teams.
- Gets his pocket picked cleanly as he brings the ball up the court.
- Doesn't turn the corner on pick and rolls to attack the hoop.
I blame Flip, not Zach. I was open-minded to it at the time he tried him at PG, but it didn't take very long to see that it wasn't going to work. And given how much he was playing Mo over Zach before Rubio got back, I thought Flip had given up on this experiment.
I think Zach has four physical gifts: Jumping, straight-line speed, lateral speed, and the ability to get his shot off from almost anywhere. What he doesn't have are the skills and instincts of a point guard. To me he shows potential as a SG with some level of freedom to take shots, including tough ones. Guys like Gerald Green, Jamaal Crawford, and even Kevin Martin take a lot of questionable shots - but that's kinda what they're paid to do: Go out and create offense.
I can see him playing some PG next to a dynamic SG that has natural PG instincts (like D'Angelo Russell!), but not as the sole decision-maker and ball handler.