Much has been made of the Spurs' sacrificing depth so they could make a splash in free agency. Some analysts have argued that the Spurs lost two of their biggest strengths in depth and chemistry when they gutted the team to acquire Aldridge.
But is our bench really that much worse than last year's?
| Position |
2014-2015 |
2015-2016 |
| PG |
Patty Mills, Cory Joseph |
Patty Mills, Ray McCallum |
| SG |
Manu Ginobili, Marco Bellinelli |
Manu Ginobili, Jonathan Simmons |
| SF |
Kyle Anderson |
Kyle Anderson |
| PF |
Boris Diaw, Matt Bonner, Jeff Ayres |
Boris Diaw, David West, Matt Bonner |
| C |
Aron Baynes |
Boban Marjanovic |
From a position-by-position analysis, it seems that on paper:
- McCallum is a downgrade from CoJo.
- Simmons is a downgrade from Bellinelli.
- The fact that we no longer have Bellinelli means that we will likely have to give Anderson minutes at the 3, which is also a downgrade.
- West will likely take Baynes' minutes at the 5 and is an upgrade over him.
- Marjanovic is also slight upgrade over Baynes, and he'll be filling the Jeff Ayres / 6th big role.
- Matt Bonner might actually see an improvement since he spent much of last season with a injured elbow. Being healthy could allow him to regain the three point shooting ability that made him an asset in certain matchups.
In summary: Our backcourt has gotten worse since we downgraded from CoJo and Bellinelli to McCallum and Simmons. Exchanging a proven veteran in Bellinelli with an unproven sop re in Anderson is also a potential downgrade at the wing. However, we upgraded our frontcourt by replacing Baynes' minutes with West, adding Marjonovic (who is also better than Baynes) to play the sixth big role, and regaining a healthy Bonner.
So while some analysts have declared that the Spurs aren't as good as advertised because they gutted their depth, I'd argue that our bench overall is only slightly worse than last year's, and in some respects, even better.