- May 30th, 2012, 10:19 am
#392080
Ilgauskas in 2007 averaged 12 and 8 while shooting 48.5%. Last year Tyson Chandler averaged 10 and 9 while shooting 65.4% and earning NBA All-Defense. Big Z has never come close to sniffing All-Defense. I would never consider even for one second taking 2007 Ilgauskas over 2011 Chandler.
Daniel Gibson averaged 8.3 points in the playoffs and was primarily a spot up shooter. While that was a solid run for him, it's hardly anything exceptional. While he and Barea pretty much scored about the same in the playoffs, Barea added assists and was a much more versatile scorer and forced defenses to respect his penetration, not just his spot up shooting like with Gibson. Who would I rather have? Barea without a shadow of a doubt.
Purple Haize wrote:The talent gap between that Dallas team and that Cleveland team was not that great. Tyson didn't do much more then did Big Z. Shawn Marion? Really? I'm not saying Marshall had as good a career but he was having a great year. So was Gibson. What Dallas DID have was a sense of maturity that came from their leaders in Kidd, who is waayyyyy past his prime and Dirk. Don't fall for the stereotypes! And as stated if James is the greatest he should have been able to over come!Donyell Marshall averaged 3.5 points on 33% shooting in the playoffs. His regular season was just as bad looking if not worse. In what universe is that a great year? Even in Donyell Marshall standards that's not even a good year. In 2011 Shawn Marion averaged 12.5 points and 7 rebounds while shooting 52%. In the playoffs it was 12, 6, and 47%. I'll take 2011 Marion over 2007 Marshall every single second of my life.
Ilgauskas in 2007 averaged 12 and 8 while shooting 48.5%. Last year Tyson Chandler averaged 10 and 9 while shooting 65.4% and earning NBA All-Defense. Big Z has never come close to sniffing All-Defense. I would never consider even for one second taking 2007 Ilgauskas over 2011 Chandler.
Daniel Gibson averaged 8.3 points in the playoffs and was primarily a spot up shooter. While that was a solid run for him, it's hardly anything exceptional. While he and Barea pretty much scored about the same in the playoffs, Barea added assists and was a much more versatile scorer and forced defenses to respect his penetration, not just his spot up shooting like with Gibson. Who would I rather have? Barea without a shadow of a doubt.
Last edited by lynchburgwildcats on May 30th, 2012, 11:48 am, edited 1 time in total.