If you remember correctly, Pop's issue with Splitter back then was he was injury prone and he had a low pain threshold. You don't remember all those complaints by Pop saying how Splitter was "injured" when he was signed, "injured" again in training camp and then "injured" yet again in the regular season right after was given a steady spot in the rotation? Turned out, that low pain threshold haunted his career and Splitter was forced to retire at 28 or whatever it was.
And I know you are a big Splitter fan but that's a strange horse to tie your whataboutery wagon to in this argument, tbh. It's not like Splitter ended up being a playoff assassin once given a chance. The very next season, he played a key role in the Spurs getting backdoor swept by the Thunder after they started fouling him on purpose and he couldn't hit a free throw. On top of that, the Thunder put Fisher on Splitter and Splitter couldn't score in the paint against the chubby point guard
Then the next season, Splitter became unplayable against the Heat.
And once Splitter was freed from meanie Pop, what did he do? Nothing. No coach ever got him to play again as he sat out with a variety of vague injuries. It's not like Splitter went on and became Kevin McHale once freed from Pop's shackles
Not to argue against myself but the player that you and the original poster I quoted should have been pointed to was George Hill. Pop benched Hill just because he was a rookie -- and went on record stating so. Saying Pop should have played Hill was a valid criticism ... one that I said was a mistake at the time and still looks like a mistake in retrospect.
Meh, there's always a young player somewhere in the system that complainers can point to as the ship is sinking as being the savior who wasn't given a chance. Any season in which the Spurs don't win a championship, there's always the complaints that Wunderkind X didn't get a shot.
And, honestly, it's not just Spurs fans. It's all NBA fanbases. They all do the same thing.
So you think rookie Cory Joseph would have made a difference? Did you watch that guy play?
Seriously though, honest question, do you put any stock into San Antonio's ability to develop players or do you think they are such amazing drafters that all their players are ready to go from Day 1? I mean, it has to be one or the other. Personally, I think they draft well but they also develop well. And that development usually means a season in the G-League so the young player can get adjusted to the professional lifestyle, learn the system and lead a team without the full blown NBA pressures right out of the gates.
Speaking of Walker specifically, I watched quite a few of his Austin games this year and he never looked ready. He was favoring his knee for a lot of the season and even when he stopped favoring it as much, his numbers were never too impressive and the team didn't respond to his play.
Still a good prospect but a savior for this year he is not.