Jeff McDonald @JMcDonald_SAEN
Describing Nando de Colo, Pop calls him "a poor man's Danny Ainge." I think that's meant to be a compliment.
Tim: 9.6
Boris: 4.5
Danny: 3.5
Patty: 1.1
Just select the Spurs and do the necessary math:
http://basketball.realgm.com/tradechecker
Jeff McDonald @JMcDonald_SAEN
Describing Nando de Colo, Pop calls him "a poor man's Danny Ainge." I think that's meant to be a compliment.
If he isn't as good as D-Wade I will be very upset.
Hmmm.... is this good?
TBH, he really reminds me of Mike Dunleavy, no joke. Similar type of skillset and athletic ability.
Dunleavy ? I dont see it
maybe for the 3 pts part of their game but thats about it
I dont remember for instance being a good passer
I hadn't thought of that comparison but that's pretty good. Ainge had PG skills but was big enough and score well enough to also play shooting guard. If De Colo is going to make it, I think that's the type of player he is going to have to be. He could thrive as a point guard who moonlights as a shooting guard but probably not if it's the other way around.
To me the comparison comes from the skillset - both don't seem to excel in any one area, but have decent all around game (passing/shooting). Both are mediocre athletes that seem to find ways to make plays.
Not identical player obviously, but to me that is the skill set/type De Colo reminds me of with regards to impact.
So now all we need is a rich-man's Dennis Johnson.
You must be thinking of a different Danny Ainge.
He is a solid passer. Again, the comparison to me comes more from they way they play with their physical abilities. It's more about a feel for the game they have and some abilities to run an offense effectively, but not as the main focal point.
I was talking about De Colo.
Sorry, I could have sworn you said "both are mediocre athletes".
I did - but that was between my De Colo and Dunleavy comparison.
Obviously Dun is a SF so it's not a natural comparision, but De Colo reminds of a PG/SG version of Dunleavy based on my reasoning above.
Okay then I was completely confused. My apologies.
Other than both being pale and both being able to shoot, I don't see anything else similar. Dunleavy is an immobile 6-foot-9 small forward who makes decent stationary passes. De Colo is a 6-foot-5 point guard who thrives on passing on the move. Dunleavy is a poor athlete. De Colo is an above average athlete quickness-wise for a 6-foot-5 guy. Dunleavy survives mostly on having a high IQ and being fundamental. De Colo plays off of instinct and had a rep before this year of not being fundamental enough. Dunleavy has to sag into the paint whenever possible to avoid getting burned defensively. De Colo, in Europe at least, is able to pressure the basketball a little bit.
Close to opposites, tbh.
Are we talking about Dunleavy Jr or Sr?
I think Ainge hustled a lot more than De Colo does. As in all the time. He was a pest.
So, I see Nando more as a not-so-much-hustling, non-floppy haired, poor man's version of Danny Ainge.
lol... DPG steps to the plate...... swwwwwingandamiss
Surround De Colo with four hall of famers and I'm sure he could have as much success as Ainge.
The main reason to have some kind of optimism about De Colo is that Spurs have signed him.
First, Spurs were loaded with guards (Parker, Ginobili, Green, Neal, Mills, Joseph, Denmon). It's not like Spurs had a big hole in their roster that needed to be filled.
Second, while a $2.8M contract is fully justified by De Colo market value in Europe, it's still a lot of money for a NAB rookie.
To sump up, Spurs, a team that has heavily scouted De Colo for 3 years, has signed him to a big contract for a rookie while he wasn't really filling a position need. They must have really seen something in him to do that.
would 3 hofers be enough?
All about the future. Manu's on the last year of his contract, for one.
Well, the Spurs excelled last year because of their exceptional passing and efficient offense. de Colo will help them continue this.
What they need now is to resign Blair and pick up an athletic wingman who can guard other teams' big men on the perimeter - that's what what missing last year against OKC.
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