The complaint about Derek Fisher was that he couldn't play defense. Look at the shooting and the assists of his opponents.
First off, Fisher's departure has nothing to do with The lakers losing. It's going to take more than a week for the Lakers to find some chemistry after changing pg's. And yes, the Lakers are beter now than they were with Fisher and it's not even close.
Derek Fisher since the trade: 3/16, 4 assists in 73 minutes. And people actually wanted him as a backup.
As far as wanting to trade Parker, don't ever take this forum seriously. Many of those whom wanted Parker traded also wanted Pop ousted, wanted Ian Mahimni to get starter minutes, and wanted James Anderson starting.
The complaint about Derek Fisher was that he couldn't play defense. Look at the shooting and the assists of his opponents.
Exactly. However, many saw him as somewhat viable on offense and thought he could help the team in limited minutes. The guy is done.
Not sure who saw him as viable on offense, but there's no doubt he could help the Spurs if he were here. He's a far better point guard at this stage than Gary Neal is, and there's absolutely no way he could be any worse on defense.
And my suggestion to look at the production of opposing backcourts against him was serious. They don't do particularly well. Not exactly a sign that he's incapable of defense. One would think the Lakers' defense would have taken a huge leap forward if he were really that bad.
He's your last resort, bottom of the barrel, last bullet in the chamber option and you woudn't go around comparing him to non-pg's like Gary Neal. Gary is a trainwreck on defense and only subs uting for the often injured Manu, who is more than capable of holding down the pg position. Patty mills is more than acceptable and should supply ample resolve backing up TP. And i wouldn't have thought twice about signing mills over Fisher.
Statistically, he's one of the worst pg's in the league. His lateral quickness is mind bogglingly slow and he's constantly struggling to close out on shooters. I haven't found any defensive metrics that shows he's even halfway decent defensively. Maybe he's some of sort of statistical anomaly. For me, I woud rather have anybody but fisher.
I will ask you like I did GSH, if you're the lakers, why would you dump Fisher over Blake if Fisher is all that and a bag of chips. And don't tell me it was a youth movement because blake isn't long for that rotation. I give Blake approximately 22-28 more games in a Laker uniform.
Last edited by Hoops Czar; 03-26-2012 at 12:57 PM.
We still could use him for a decent C
Tony Parker has elevated his game this year, which has been great. The Spurs needed him to do so to be compe ive. We need to see him close this thing out before any statements can be said about not trading him.
The Spurs were in a world of hurt after getting bounced in round 1 last year. Tim looked finished and Manu was hurt again.
In Tony's last playoff series, he was outplayed by a serviceable pg in Mike friggin Conley. That's still fresh in my memory.
TP has been really good for us this season, but seriously, if Chicago offers D. Rose for Parker (if the numbers were aligned) then it would be stupid if the FO declines that.
Cmon seriously. I love the Spurs, been a fan since they drafted Tim Duncan in 97, but I sure as know that Rose would be a lot more dangerous in a Silver and Black uniform than Tony is. They both can create havoc in the paint with their penetration, but Rose is a bigger threat that can open up our shooters better and I believe that Rose can play as the playmaker without consciously looking to pass, otoh, Tony has to mentally prepare himself to be a playmaker, that it takes away his aggressiveness to score the ball.
Just my 2 cents. (I'm a lurker in this forum for a while now)
Well, let's not start out with a strawman, because I've yet to see anyone defending Fisher saying that Blake is worth a . You can form your opinions to fit any explanation you like, but the rest of us don't have to agree.
Youth movement? No. Endurance movement? Absolutely. Your prediction about Blake fits right into it. Look at the minutes. Mike Brown is going to run six or seven guys into the ground between now and the end of the season, and they're praying that Sessions is going to be able to step up and play 43 minutes a night before it's over. He's already up to 36 minutes a game since he became the starter. The Lakers rolled the dice that Fish wouldn't be able to take that kind of punishment. Kupchak admitted that he has reservations about getting rid of Fisher, so that was pretty clearly a factor.
If the Lakers thought they were going nowhere and they needed a home run of a trade to salvage any chance of contending for a championship, then they didn't dump Fisher in favor of Blake, they dumped Fisher in favor of Sessions and Hill. Blake simply has no value. If he did, he'd have been able to take the starting spot if Fisher is so "done".
"In Retrospect"
Spurs haven't even gotten out of the first round of the playoffs yet.
My opinions are that of many and I'm not running for office so I can assure you, I don't care about public perception.
Endurance movement? There are a ton of players floating around the D-league with high endurance. I'd find it very difficult to throw away all that playoff experience and Kobe's very own "in house" psychiatrist for a little endurance.... don't you? And if Kupchak had reservations about the trade, then he's lying through his teeth in favor of massaging Derek's morale. I do recall him making an outlandish statement of trading Fisher so he could receive more playing time as opposed to coming off the bench in limited minutes. That's just called politicing and saving face. And if he did have reservations about the trade at all, it was probably because he didn't clear it with Bryant beforehand.
And yes, the Lakers needed to make a change at Pg, and session's will no doubt fill that role like a king in contrast. But, it should tell you something that the Lakers chose style (endurance? Blake) over substance (Fisher).
And to the point, I'm not arguing against the sessions trade, just that Fisher's leadership role and playoff experience trump that of Blake's endurance though Kupchak didn't think so.
Yeah why would you want a championship pedigree un flappable backup point guard for 10-15 mins a night..
Yeah well if my mom had balls, she'd be my dad
Good post though
It's unbelievable how many years Tony has put up top tier PG stats for the Spurs and only THIS year are people finally coming to the conclusion that maybe we shouldn't trade away the guy who got our last Finals MVP and has 3 rings to go with it.![]()
It wasn't till after the third ring did the majority of people not want Pop fired....
Fisher can't defend super quick point guards. He's better at defending bigger point guards and smaller two guards. Outside of that he's good at hitting clutch shots. The guy can miss shots all game and then hit them when they count.
Parker's Finals MVP is overrated. He was going against a hobbled Larry Hughes and a rookie Daniel Gibson. There was no reason for him not to dominate that matchup.
Although if he'd hit shots earlier his late-game heroics wouldn't be needed...
For myself, I get that being clutch is important but I'm not a fan of regularly winning by the skin on my teeth if it can be avoided.
Right now Fisher doesn't provide more than late game 3 point shooting and veteran leadership. Neither of which the Spurs really need at this juncture.
Since nobody in the entire league can, that's a fellacious argument.
He can also play smart team defense, gets into passing lanes, draws charges, physically harrasses people, and disrupts the other team's flow. All reasons he'd have done fine as a backup for the Spurs. Can't wait to see Patty get some run, and I hope he makes us forget all about Fish.
Do you want me to go through the Spurs playoff history and show you every series where TP has completely dominated the other team? Because it wasn't just against Cleveland. But do continue to discount DOMINANT FINALS PERFORMANCES because the cir stances were merely favorable.
I din't want to trade Parker but I did want to trade Manu.
Now that is the one the Spurs should have traded. The Spurs are winning with very little input from Manu this year.
No single player has been more pivotal to the Spurs' playoff success or failure since his arrival than Tony Parker. When Parker plays well and is able to break down defenses, they win. When Parker is stopped up and unable to penetrate, they lose. The '03 team was able to count on a miraculous game from the backup to overcome Parker's bad play, and Pop was able to swap defensive assignments in '05 against the Pistons to make the matchups work in their favor.
Being able to trade Parker for a talented bigman would have helped but at the same time he was at least able to bring Diaw.
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