View Full Version : Who would you pick for a franchise player?
Supergirl
08-27-2010, 01:58 PM
If you could build around one of these superstars RIGHT NOW, who would you pick? Factor in ability, age, versatility, upside and downside.
Halberto
08-27-2010, 02:04 PM
Dwight Howard.
hater
08-27-2010, 02:04 PM
KD is where is at right now
hater
08-27-2010, 02:05 PM
Assuming that you are talking about active players, I'd go with Kobe. I know this may come as a surprise to you all but Kobe has proven to be the easiest to build around. Just get him a decent big and a few solid role players, hell, he don't even need a bench... I think you get the point.
:lmao
you mean you get him a top 5, HOF big
yeah very easy
Supergirl
08-27-2010, 02:08 PM
Dwight Howard.
D'oh. Can't believe I left him off the list. I still wouldn't pick him, but he certainly belongs on the list.
Flo-Rida
08-27-2010, 02:10 PM
Lebron James
Supergirl
08-27-2010, 02:10 PM
Assuming that you are talking about active players, I'd go with Kobe. I know this may come as a surprise to you all but Kobe has proven to be the easiest to build around. Just get him a decent big and a few solid role players, hell, he don't even need a bench... I think you get the point.
The only reason I wouldn't pick Kobe is because he's got a lot less years on him than people realize. He's been playing since he was 18, and long seasons almost every year in the league. His body is about 2 years away from completely breaking down, I think.
BUT he is the best player in the league right now. I just wouldn't build around him for the future.
in2deep
08-27-2010, 02:11 PM
It' been proven these guys are no franchise players:
Lebron James
Dwayne Wade
Brandon Roy
Deron Williams
Amar'e Stoudemire
Dirk Nowitzki
Jury still out on KD and DR
kamikazi_player
08-27-2010, 02:11 PM
Lebron or Dwight right now.
Flo-Rida
08-27-2010, 02:12 PM
It' been proven these guys are no franchise players:
Lebron James
Dwayne Wade
Brandon Roy
Deron Williams
Amar'e Stoudemire
Dirk Nowitzki
Jury still out on KD and DR
elaborate ?
Halberto
08-27-2010, 02:16 PM
Assuming that you are talking about active players, I'd go with Kobe. I know this may come as a surprise to you all but Kobe has proven to be the easiest to build around. Just get him a decent big and a few solid role players, hell, he don't even need a bench... I think you get the point.
Come on now. You cant really be underrating the talent around him right now. Lamar Odom, Ron Artest, Andrew Bynum are much more than role players. You might be able to make the case that Bynum is since his glass knees make him a wild card. Pau Gasol was never just a decent big, and now he is the best PF in the game.
Stretching much? Put Wade, Lebron, Ginobili, or Durant in his place and they would still own the West. I can only imagine what the Lakers would be like if Durant was in Kobe's place... scary shit
BRHornet45
08-27-2010, 02:16 PM
Lmao son ... even more proof of how much hatred this board has for Paul. You put Williams on the list, but leave out Paul.
himat
08-27-2010, 02:18 PM
Some of you guys are drinking to much of that LeBron haterade.
I know a GM would look stupid as hell if they didn't pick him. The only reason I wouldn't pick him is if I was a GM of a smaller franchise.
Picking Kobe would be dumb at this point, unless your team is already good...but even then. Dude's 32 now.
I barely choose Durant over LeBron. Its only because I would hate LeBron's antics on and off the court though. Talent wise LBJ should be chosen.
JamStone
08-27-2010, 02:19 PM
I'd probably go with Dwight Howard too.
LeBron has been the best player in the league for a couple seasons, but even then up until now, it's been hard to put the right players around him to make the team a true championship contender.
Dwight hasn't won it all either, but I think the league is so lacking of good big men that it's easier to build around a quality big, even when that big has serious holes in his games like Dwight does. You can put around good players around Dwight and contend in this league, and quality perimeter players are easier to acquire than quality bigs. You put merely "good players" around the superstar wing players like LeBron, Kobe, and Wade, I don't think it's enough. You still need an elite big man to legitimately contend.
That's why I'd go with Dwight over LeBron.
Halberto
08-27-2010, 02:20 PM
It's hard to remember how good Paul is when there is a surplus of amazing PG's in the league and adding that he's been gone for a year essentially. Not to mention he hasn't gone past the 2nd round.
Kevin Durant 35
08-27-2010, 02:42 PM
1. KD
2. Bron
3. CP3 or D12
in2deep
08-27-2010, 02:46 PM
:lmao
you mean you get him a top 5, HOF big
yeah very easy
:lol
Kevin Durant 35
08-27-2010, 02:48 PM
Paul is the best PG in the league, and it's not even close. I will say that he is losing props for running around sucking Lebron's cock.
No he is losing props for being an injury prone
himat
08-27-2010, 02:55 PM
I'd probably go with Dwight Howard too.
LeBron has been the best player in the league for a couple seasons, but even then up until now, it's been hard to put the right players around him to make the team a true championship contender.
Dwight hasn't won it all either, but I think the league is so lacking of good big men that it's easier to build around a quality big, even when that big has serious holes in his games like Dwight does. You can put around good players around Dwight and contend in this league, and quality perimeter players are easier to acquire than quality bigs. You put merely "good players" around the superstar wing players like LeBron, Kobe, and Wade, I don't think it's enough. You still need an elite big man to legitimately contend.
That's why I'd go with Dwight over LeBron.
Good point I never really thought of that.
I remember Phil Jackson saying this a few years back too.
Supergirl
08-27-2010, 03:02 PM
Oh, left Chris Paul off too. Didn't mean to. Wouldn't pick him, but he should have been an option.
Basketballgirl25
08-27-2010, 03:16 PM
I choose Kevin Durant, because of his age. Lebron and Wade aren't old, but they are older then Kevin Durant, so not as much upside anymore like they once had. I have to say now I'd prob want Dwight Howard, centers are hard to find
Supergirl
08-27-2010, 04:03 PM
I choose Kevin Durant, because of his age. Lebron and Wade aren't old, but they are older then Kevin Durant, so not as much upside anymore like they once had. I have to say now I'd prob want Dwight Howard, centers are hard to find
I wouldn't pick Howard because even though he's the best C in the league in terms of offense and rebounding, he's pretty weak defensively and hasn't demonstrated himself to have much heart and some of the intangibles. He could easily go the way of Nowitzki- puts up good numbers and gets into the playoffs but never winning a championship.
On the other hand, in a league with such a dearth of quality centers, building around a franchise C is a solid way to go.
TIMMYD!
08-27-2010, 04:07 PM
I wouldn't pick Howard because even though he's the best C in the league in terms of offense and rebounding, he's pretty weak defensively and hasn't demonstrated himself to have much heart and some of the intangibles. He could easily go the way of Nowitzki- puts up good numbers and gets into the playoffs but never winning a championship.
On the other hand, in a league with such a dearth of quality centers, building around a franchise C is a solid way to go.
I think you have the bold words switched around.
elemento
08-27-2010, 04:17 PM
Lebron James
LOL at Stoudemire being on that list.
Chieflion
08-27-2010, 08:14 PM
1. LeBron James
2. Dwight Howard
It's a toss-up between Dwight, Lebron, and Durant. Why is Kobe even in the discussion? The dude's been in the league since the Jurassic period.
Venti Quattro
08-27-2010, 08:42 PM
Dwight or Durant.
Darrin
08-27-2010, 10:07 PM
Right now I'd give my left nut for Chris Paul in a Detroit uniform. I'd take Carmelo for the whole Pistons roster, however. That's the available players and my team needs them. Luring one may net the other as well.
Right now I'd give my left nut for Chris Paul in a Detroit uniform. I'd take Carmelo for the whole Pistons roster, however. That's the available players and my team needs them. Luring one may net the other as well.
If I'm not mistaken, didn't the Pistons had the chance to draft Carmelo back in 03?
HarlemHeat37
08-27-2010, 11:12 PM
Supergirl is honestly such a shitty poster..Dwight Howard is weak defensively?..you can add that to the many ridiculous statements she has made in the NBA forum, particularly since The Donation happened..
As for the question, I easily take Lebron..he has already proven he can take mediocre teams to the NBA Finals and an average supporting cast to the ECF, so I can only imagine what he could do with a competent supporting cast..he'll show it in Miami this season..
Howard would be #2, for obvious reasons..
himat
08-27-2010, 11:22 PM
Supergirl is honestly such a shitty poster..Dwight Howard is weak defensively?..you can add that to the many ridiculous statements she has made in the NBA forum, particularly since The Donation happened..
I think she mixed up the words offensively and defensively in her post. As you may have noticed she also said Howard is great on offense, so she made a mix up.
HarlemHeat37
08-27-2010, 11:23 PM
Ya, makes sense, my bad..although she definitely is one of the shittiest posters on SpursTalk..
Easily James and he's at least a tier or two above than the rest of these guys. I'd go James, Dwight, then Durant on the list.
Dwight seems too weak when it comes to mental toughness (whines about his coach, whines on his blog about feeling like he's persecuted by the refs, meltdowns on the court, makes negative impressions of his coach which seems shitty no matter how you spin it) and compared to past elite big men he's more of a project on offense that goes way beyond just post moves - he's lacking when it comes to IQ and fundamentals like footwork and dribbling. He also goes for the highlight reel blocks and in the playoffs his numbers seem hollow especially when he fouls himself out like an idiot. Howard also seems to spend too much time working on movies which is surprising considering how much improvement he could use. After playing with Kobe and the rest of the Team USA you'd think his work ethic would be nearly impeccable. For that reason and the fact that he's already been in the league for six years makes it hard for to believe that Dwight will improve much; this seems like what Dwights going to be. A very distant second to James although if you don't keep the King happy he'll leave (but after Dwight defended James this offseason and considering he was part of that Team USA - safe bet he'd leave in similar circumstances and in many ways his team seem like the Lebron Cavs team in the sense they disappoint in the playoffs but dominate the reg season).
Durant's mental toughness deserves to be in question too considering his lackluster first round although unlike Dwight that was his first experience and it was up against the defending and still champion Lakers. However Durant's team seemed like they had a better shot than the Howard did against LA in the 2009 Finals (5 game series); only a clutch Gasol putback away from a Game 7 for Duran'ts team too. Still for all of Dwight's faults his impact can be greater but I think Durant is more committed to improving his game - for that reason I wouldn't be surprised if Durant beats Howard in MVP votes and overall impact but he's gotta prove that. Durant also doesn't whine to his coach and on his blog like a little bitch unlike big man Dwight Howard. Durant also seems more loyal and respectable than any of these guys FWIW.
All three of these guys have also been iron men when it comes to durability but obviously Dwight would suffer the most if he ran into injury since he has no range, he's not 7 feet tall, predictable post moves, and his overall game is based on his elite athleticism. James has the court vision and more skills to add; Durant's got a shooting touch that should age well.
8FOR!3
08-28-2010, 12:02 AM
1. LeBron James
2. Dwight Howard
3. Kevin Durant
4. Chris Paul
5. Dwyane Wade
6. Carmelo Anthony
You can have the rest.
Darrin
08-28-2010, 12:55 AM
If I'm not mistaken, didn't the Pistons had the chance to draft Carmelo back in 03?
http://www.lostlettermen.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/darko_milicic_280809.jpghttp://www.slamonline.com/online/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/slam_75.jpghttp://www.nbaloud.com/userimages/user1195_1152602817.jpg
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2007/01/19/sports/20darko.1.600.jpg
:depressed
JamStone
08-28-2010, 01:55 AM
Easily James and he's at least a tier or two above than the rest of these guys. I'd go James, Dwight, then Durant on the list.
You make some really good points on why James and arguably Durant are better players than Dwight Howard. If the question was another "who is the best player" then I'd be pretty much on board with what you said.
However, that wasn't the question. The question is, "who would you pick for a franchise player?"
Two of the biggest factors I'd look at for in a franchise player would be:
1. Who could I most easily build around to construct a championship contending team?
2. Who would help me sell the most tickets?
Those aren't the only things I would consider, but they'd be at or very high on the list.
Of those three players, LeBron, Dwight, and Durant, LeBron is easily the best player among them. And, I wouldn't argue much if you said Durant is already a better player than Dwight. But having the best player in the league, especially if that player is a perimeter player, doesn't guarantee championship success. Since Michael Jordan, the 12 subsequent NBA championships have been dominated by teams with great big men. The 2004 Pistons might be the only exception, with perhaps the 2008 Celtics being possibly another. But even those two teams had dominant big men defensively.
I know that in the NBA, a dominant wing player like LeBron or Kobe or Wade can help a team win a championship. But even those great wing players, without great front court help can also mean the team is mediocre or worse (2005-2007 Lakers, post 2006 Heat). I also know it's easier to acquire very good perimeter players than it is to acquire very good big men. If I already have a big man who can put up 18-20 ppg and 12-15 rpg on 60% shooting, even if I acquire a very good but not an elite perimeter wing scorer, the team can have a lot of success. Whereas, giving a superstar wing player only "good" but not "elite" front court help means the team will be slightly above average at best.
Give me a dominant big man, even with as many holes as Dwight has in his game, and I'm in position to build around him more easily than I can build around LeBron or Kobe or Wade. The NBA simply has a lack of quality dominant big men. With Dwight, I'd already be several steps ahead of the majority of teams in the league.
That second factor goes more to why I'd choose Dwight over Durant. LeBron sells tickets. No doubt about it. He has the marketing appeal and the personality and charisma to carry a franchise, as we saw in Cleveland. But, compare Dwight and his charisma and personality to Kevin Durant's soft spoken, pimpled face image, and I have more confidence that my team will get more national exposure and hype with Dwight as the franchise star than it would led by Durant.
I'd be foolish to say Dwight is better than LeBron. And LeBron is certainly not a bad choice among the young stars in the league to want to start a franchise and build a team around. But the factors I just mention is why I would still take Dwight over the others.
JamStone, It might be easier to build a franchise around Dwight but he's definitely a couple of tiers below James and wouldn't be as great of a piece to build around. In this league its easier to counter Dwight than it is LeBron. To counter Dwight all you need is a player with comparable size that will play competent defense; hell it can even be old has-beens like Shaq and Sheed since Dwight has no range at all and his footwork, arsenal in the post, etc seem very lacking.
Imo Dwight Howard is just simply too much of a project to be a better franchise player- he should be tearing up the league and he does in the regular season but he can't even take his man consistently 1v1 against the great teams in the playoffs. In fact he seems too prone to bad decisions whether its dumb fouls (he made history for the wrong reason in this past playoffs; a lesser team like the Bobcats baited him to the bench...that shouldn't happen with truly elite big men and very lacking when it comes to being a franchise player), turnovers, passing out of double teams.
Dwight may be the "best big man in the league" but he's arguably the worst "best big man in the league" the NBA has seen and it shows in the playoffs. His strength on the defensive end seems to mostly revolve around his athleticism and he's posted the worst block values the NBA has seen in the past few years. Dwight really lacks when it comes to basic fundamentals and IQ and once his athleticism goes your franchise is really screwed since what skills or intangibles does he possess to make up for it?
LeBron has never struggled as badly as Dwight has and is simply much more talented, tougher, and much more of a superstar than Howard on and off the court. Dwight's a guy you can't even trust to stay on the court and doesn't need to be doubled and can be frustrated to the point where a system built around him will collapse.
haters. Lebron should be the only answer.
will_spurs
08-28-2010, 02:27 AM
I don't see many franchise players on this list, especially not Amar'e. Roy, Williams and Rose are really good, but not franchise players in my book, at least not yet.
James, Nowitzki, Howard and Paul are superstars, but they have proven that they are soft, which is a nice way to say that they are losers. They just don't have the competitive mindset and killer instinct required to lead a team to win at the highest level.
So that leaves us with Durant, Wade and Bryant. Bryant would be the obvious choice if not for his age... this guy is ancient by now. There's just no upside. Wade is young enough, but his injuries lead me to think his career will be short.
So even though he's still unproven (in terms of rings at least), I'd have to go with Durant now. Actually 10 years from now I won't be surprised to see that Durant is the one mentioned in the MJ comparisons, not James.
JamStone
08-28-2010, 02:46 AM
Cane, your arguments continue to be ones based on player comparisons, not the factors I mentioned. You even said yourself it would be easier to build around Dwight. That's one of the main things I'm looking at when I'm starting a franchise. An easier avenue to build a championship contender. Both charismatic personalities who will sell tickets. But in today's NBA, I feel Dwight, with all his faults, can do more with average teammates than LeBron with average teammates. Heck, two seasons ago in the 2009 playoffs, Dwight's team beat LeBron's team. LeBron played better. LeBron was the best player in the series, but Dwight's team won. LeBron had enough talent the last two seasons to have the best record in the league, and Dwight's team went farther in the playoffs both years.
It's not about who I think the better player is. Or who has fewer holes in his game. Or who can take people on one-on-one more successfully. I look at the rest of the league and see that some of the best centers in the league include Chris Kaman and Andrew Bogut and Joakim Noah and the like. I think having a guy like Dwight Howard gives me a better shot at building a championship contender than having a guy like LeBron. With LeBron or Kobe or Wade, I feel you need another great player in the front court. With Dwight, I feel like I don't need to find a way to get an elite perimeter scorer. I can find guys a tier below and still have the team contend.
That's how I look at it.
You know a guy like Bill Russell was even worse an offensive player than Dwight Howard is. He was a below average offensive player. Does that matter? He still won 11 titles. I look at the state of NBA big men, and I'm fine that Dwight Howard has a lot of holes in his game because there aren't any other really great and dominant big men in the NBA anyway. The ones who arguably are either are old and on their decline or they're really perimeter players who play the center/PF positions.
I think you also put too much an emphasis about Dwight's offense. He's still putting up 18-20 ppg on around 60% shooting and still commands a double team. I find another guy who closes the game. Dwight's contributions aren't only or even mostly what he provides defensively, in the paint, and on the boards. You add his defense into the equation, and he still gives you 20 points on 60%, and you simply have to consider him.
JamStone, while I did write that Dwight would be easier to build around I contend that James would still be a more productive franchise player on and off the court. For me its not about being easy, its the ultimate goal of a championship and James seems like the best option but your perspective is logical as well.
Imo Dwight has way too many downsides and is more of a project superstar than a legitimate one especially when compared to past elite bigs. Comparing him to Russell seems inadequate for a variety of reasons but mainly because Dwight doesn't have the fundamentals or IQ on his level and the NBA is pretty different now. Howard's also easier to counter in today's league than LeBron James. Boston just got one for the vet min in Shaq and the 7th seeded Bobcats frustrated Howard into the history books for his terrible fouling.
Dwight's a guy you can't even trust to stay on the court due to his fouling tendencies, also whines about his coach, whines on his blog about refs, is reckless or dumb to the point where he KO's and elbows everyone in the league (New England area probably despises him after the shit he's done in the playoffs), picks up technicals to the point where he might get suspended, etc. Having a franchise player that fouls himself out against the 7th seed team in the East throughout the series is :wow On the other hand James will leave your franchise if unhappy but considering Howard was on that TEAM USA and defended James this offseason... he probably has the same attitude.
A franchise player is also someone you can throw the rock to and expect good things to happen and that just doesn't happen as it should with Howard; especially in the playoffs. He turns the ball over, not good at drilling, he's not good at passing, subpar footwork, can be single covered by much lesser players, and worst of all he's susceptible to fouling early and often on both ends of the court. He's also got zero range; it seems much easier to counter Howard than it is LeBron and it shows even in this elite big man deprived era since has-beens like Sheed and Shaq will give him serious trouble and lessen his impact. Hell even his defense is overrated since he goes for the highlight reel plays which he forsakes the fundamentals behind protecting the rim (and he admits it too); he also has posted the worst block value the NBA has seen since that stat was recorded. He's the embodiment of why some stats can be misleading but he doesn't even average 20/10 in this era of big men.
Go with James because he's a much better player, much bigger star, and has led horrible teams into some of the most dominant runs the NBA has seen. However both guys have failed to meet expectations since their Finals runs however James has been much more productive on and off the court and is a superior enough talent that you pick him over Dwight rather easily.
Poirot
08-28-2010, 04:42 PM
With Dwight, I feel like I don't need to find a way to get an elite perimeter scorer. I can find guys a tier below and still have the team contend.
I feel just the opposite. If Howard wants to win a championship (and not just contend), he needs a top-tier wing. Even Shaq needed Wade and Kobe.
Supergirl
08-28-2010, 09:20 PM
Good arguments made for Howard...even though I agree he's soft, he's easily the best big man in the league, and all championship teams post MJ have had a dominant big man, except the 2004 Pistons. I would include KG as a dominant big man, even though like Duncan he plays PF.
Howard makes a lot of sense, though Kevin Durant is, I think, the most talented and well-rounded player on the list outside of Kobe Bryant, who is too old to build around...
ajh18
08-29-2010, 02:02 AM
Talent-wise, it's Lebron. And it's not that close.
But I wouldn't pick him as my franchise player. First of all, I wouldn't be willing to cater to guys like "Maverick" Carter and "Worldwide" Wes. I wouldn't want my star to get special treatment (or at least I'd want to minimize it), because I think it sets a bad example for the rest of the team. I'd want someone good for the community, loyal, and to create the "image" I want for my franchise.
Lebron, while the most physically gifted player on the planet, doesn't have those things. So for me it would come down to Durant or Howard.
And it's funny, because normally I'd pick defense, rebounding, and a big man over a scorering wing. I think scoring is the more replaceable talent. And yet, for some reason, I think I'd go with Durant. He's young, long, an impeccable scorer. I think you put a good defensive big and a big with SOME offensive skills, a decent athlete/wing defender, and a competent point guiard who can shoot the three, and I think you've got a title team.
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