elindholm
edited for content
if that someone else is the polish rifle, who cares?
Right, exactly. The 11th through 13th men have to be someone. A borderline competent scrub is better than a waste of a jersey.
if that someone else is the polish rifle, who cares?
Right, exactly. The 11th through 13th men have to be someone. A borderline competent scrub is better than a waste of a jersey.
What is the risk? It is a roster slot and counts against the luxury tax. Signing Livingston means NOT signing someone else.
I see Livingston as low risk/low reward. I am sure if he is signed half the board will want to start him by October sight unseen, he won't be the player he was sorry never gonna happen.
Someone else like Pat Burke, Sean Marks, Eric Piatskowski or Paul Shirley? Give me a guy who's got a chance to be a good player, even if its a low chance, than some guy that everyone knows shouldn't be in the league given his skill level.
This would be a NO risk signing and I'd love it if the Suns grew a pair and signed Livingston to a one year deal for the minimum, with a team option for the 2nd year. Livingston can play the 1, 2 or 3 theoretically in small bursts and if he can get healthy he'd be a terrific backup for Nash while we wait for Dragic.
Now I'm not saying you sign Shaun in leu of Tyron, but if Lue goes elsewhere I'd love Livingston, or I'd love to have both guys. Since Livingston is so big and is fairly versatile, he could probably play off the ball a bit.
As 12th men go, I think you'd be pretty loopy to think there's a better one out there than Shaun Livingston.
Someone else like Pat Burke, Sean Marks, Eric Piatskowski or Paul Shirley? Give me a guy who's got a chance to be a good player, even if its a low chance, than some guy that everyone knows shouldn't be in the league given his skill level.
This would be a NO risk signing and I'd love it if the Suns grew a pair and signed Livingston to a one year deal for the minimum, with a team option for the 2nd year. Livingston can play the 1, 2 or 3 theoretically in small bursts and if he can get healthy he'd be a terrific backup for Nash while we wait for Dragic.
Now I'm not saying you sign Shaun in leu of Tyron, but if Lue goes elsewhere I'd love Livingston, or I'd love to have both guys. Since Livingston is so big and is fairly versatile, he could probably play off the ball a bit.
As 12th men go, I think you'd be pretty loopy to think there's a better one out there than Shaun Livingston.
Right on...with our training staff, if they could somehow pull a miracle, Livingston would be a more than capable backup, and provide much needed size at the position. For a minimum deal, it's a no brainer.
how many cripples do the Suns need? really I hear the miracle staff post way too much, pretty much everyone the suns sign needs the fing tin man treatment, makes me nervous to be honest. And lest not forget our "miracle" staff didn't get Hill well enough to contribute in the playoffs, but that's never brought up.
To me that's an unrealistic thought. Has this guy even come close to playing a full season with his knee healthy? No.....and some think he could be a Nash replacement coming off one of the freakiest knee injuries we've seen in the NBA with his skinny frame? I don't see it. If I'm wrong, then whatever, but I don't see it. There is no way that knee will ever be the same. There's no telling how long it will take to even trust that knee again....see Amare. Even if he were to succeed here, the Suns won't sign him to any long term deal to be the PGOTF.People don't want Livingston here to be a back up, they want him to come in and be the heir to Nash, believe me when people think of signing Livingston, they are hoping to catch lightning in the bottle for a PGOTF not a role playing back up.
So you're saying the Suns is where once great now injured players return to mediocrity.
how many cripples do the Suns need? really I hear the miracle staff post way too much, pretty much everyone the suns sign needs the fing tin man treatment, makes me nervous to be honest. And lest not forget our "miracle" staff didn't get Hill well enough to contribute in the playoffs, but that's never brought up.
To me that's an unrealistic thought. Has this guy even come close to playing a full season with his knee healthy? No.....and some think he could be a Nash replacement coming off one of the freakiest knee injuries we've seen in the NBA with his skinny frame? I don't see it. If I'm wrong, then whatever, but I don't see it. There is no way that knee will ever be the same. There's no telling how long it will take to even trust that knee again....see Amare. Even if he were to succeed here, the Suns won't sign him to any long term deal to be the PGOTF.
The guy has had two freak injuries...granted they were horrible injuries but he also is only 23 so it's not like it's chronic, yet. It's not like he's Grant Hill, having many major problems over a 10+ year career. He is a 6'7 point guard and average 10 and 5 in his last full season. I still think we need another backup pg, but to sign this guy for the minimum with the last roster spot is worth the risk.
The fact that Grant Hill wasn't healthy for the playoffs had nothing to do with the staff. Hill played the majority of the season and played at a very high level. If you compare his numbers during the regular season, they were comparable to Tayshaun Prince. Grant Hill got injured because he was playing far to many minutes, just like Nash. I think around halfway the season, Hill was leading the team in minutes and at 32 minutes a game he was playing much more than he ever should. That is either the fault of the coach or the front office.
It is fairly obvious that certain players are going to be more likely to wear down. It took until this year for the Suns to finally acknowledge that Nash's minutes must be reduced. Every year, he would start out on fire and by the end of the season and in the playoffs he was less effective, especially from the 3 point line. He's played 34-35 minutes a game every season he has been in Phoenix. Running the offense and taking considerable shots all season takes it's toll, and his back problems aren't getting any better. I think we could be better than expected if we can get Hill and Nash reduced minutes but am worried that we won't get the backups necessary to cut their minutes.
Ok ladies. Find someone here who has actually said they see livingston as the heir apparent to Nash.
Everyone is saying, bring him in for the vet min, cant hurt. Its a low risk high reward venture. If he is still a gimp, oh well, if he is actually as improved as reports say, then yipee. His knee is reportedly STRONGER than before, and he is running full speed.
NO ONE is saying he is the end all solution to our backup PG woes, so stop with these spiteful "bring him in so he fails and I laugh at everyone who gets mad" sayings. Grow up.
I do want Livingston here, firstly because when he gets on the court in February and limps around sucking you'll see people turn on him like no tomorrow and I will enjoy it. Fans do not accept worthless players on the end of the bench unless they are athletically challenged chuckers and even then it's for one year max. The common fan turned on Grant Hill to a degree and they will turn on Livingston too.
Treesquid has failed this thread.
how many cripples do the Suns need? really I hear the miracle staff post way too much, pretty much everyone the suns sign needs the fing tin man treatment, makes me nervous to be honest. And lest not forget our "miracle" staff didn't get Hill well enough to contribute in the playoffs, but that's never brought up.
dont forget about a coach who could have rested hill for the last part of the season(about a week or so???). and the 1st two games of round1 vs SA.The guy has had two freak injuries...granted they were horrible injuries but he also is only 23 so it's not like it's chronic, yet. It's not like he's Grant Hill, having many major problems over a 10+ year career. He is a 6'7 point guard and average 10 and 5 in his last full season. I still think we need another backup pg, but to sign this guy for the minimum with the last roster spot is worth the risk.
The fact that Grant Hill wasn't healthy for the playoffs had nothing to do with the staff. Hill played the majority of the season and played at a very high level. If you compare his numbers during the regular season, they were comparable to Tayshaun Prince. Grant Hill got injured because he was playing far to many minutes, just like Nash. I think around halfway the season, Hill was leading the team in minutes and at 32 minutes a game he was playing much more than he ever should. That is either the fault of the coach or the front office.
It is fairly obvious that certain players are going to be more likely to wear down. It took until this year for the Suns to finally acknowledge that Nash's minutes must be reduced. Every year, he would start out on fire and by the end of the season and in the playoffs he was less effective, especially from the 3 point line. He's played 34-35 minutes a game every season he has been in Phoenix. Running the offense and taking considerable shots all season takes it's toll, and his back problems aren't getting any better. I think we could be better than expected if we can get Hill and Nash reduced minutes but am worried that we won't get the backups necessary to cut their minutes.
The race was terribly tight and it would not have taken much to have fallen out of the playoffs all together. The real problem was that D'Antoni had no real backup plan. You'd think after so many years of failing to advance he'd be more concerned about depth, but somehow it never was addressed.
yes his lack of not prepairing the bench also compounded the problem.The race was terribly tight and it would not have taken much to have fallen out of the playoffs all together. The real problem was that D'Antoni had no real backup plan. You'd think after so many years of failing to advance he'd be more concerned about depth, but somehow it never was addressed.