"So, yes, while I agree there was a need for a talented athletic swingman, the need to draft an athletic PG who can score was greater and quality point guards are harder to come by through free agency than small forwards."
Bartelby
I wanna address your entire reply piece by piece, but I'll lay off cuz its all a moot point now, what's done is done. I'll simply say that for the remaining few seasons of Duncan's prime, yes I think stopgaps at backup point guard would work just fine (Manu, Mason, Vaughn).. caveat being this also allows the spurs to go big. A project point guard like Hill that has played shooting guard mostly his entire life is really is rolling the dice.... I mean, even the pick itself makes no sense. Spurs needed that #1 to be plug n play.. if your going that route you go with pure point guard, Mario Chalmers would have clearly been the much better choice.
Hill is going to need more time to get acclimated to a position he's not used to playing, as evidenced by his struggles already in summer league. He's probably going to make alot more mistakes along the way, and with the level of compe ion in the west at an all time high he is likely to end up on the bench, or at best getting very limited "garbage" minutes, and Pop using those aformentioned "stop-gaps" anyway.
Udoka is a good career backup who can hustle, play defense, and make a few wide open shots once in awhile, but nowhere near what Donte Greene is going to be offensively. Bowen is closing in on 40 years old, and both are also shorter, around 6'5. Greene is everything they are not - young, tall, quick, athletic, and can score alot of points inside and out. He would have been starting by the 3rd week of the season. I think as far as priorities go for the spurs, obtaining a starting quality swingman should have trumped backup pg anyday. Also its alot easier IMO to find a backup point in FA than a starting quality 3.