He was probably the best player on an eastern conference team with some solid depth to 42-40. Let's not act like he was pulling a Westbrook or something and was carrying them night in night out.
here we go... putting words in my mouth. I never said he was pulling a Westbrook. But again, that team had been awful for years, still wasn't all that talented and Russell's play and growth was the catalyst for their turnaround giving the Sixers a solid fight in the first round.
You have to have SOME leadership abilities to do that with a team that's been that awful forever.
He is a good young player, but he was by no means the leader of that team.
By all means, tell me who was the leader of that team if not the All-Star who averaged 21/7/4? Top points scorer, best distributor and the engine that got the entire team going.
Rubio has been a leader and a mentor on a 50 win Utah team for the last two years. I definitely put a lot more stock in that than what Russell did last year.
But Rubio was a leader of his?! So, they just got rid of one of the leaders of their team? No, the leader of that team was Mitchell.
And I'm not saying Russell was an amazing leader, but before Rubio got to play with Mitchell, THE undisputed leader of that team, Rubio didn't lead anyone anywhere but the bottom of the Western standings. Did he help with Utah? Sure. I'll even grant you he had a leadership role there... but to say being a secondary leader of the team for two years somehow immediately vaults him over a young guy who finally got it and led his team as the number one option out of the doldrums feels like a specious argument.