zmac wrote:I totally agree. Hughes will be to LeBron what Pippen was to Jordan, im not sayin he is Pippen and LeBron is Jordan, im just saying that they will be a great duo together.
Now teams wont be able to just double Lebron and shut down 3 quarters of the cavs offense, they will have to watch out for Hughes.
Also Hughes is very good defensively, and both Lebron and Hughes getting all the steals they get, Cleveland will become this seasons Phoenix with the fast up and down type basketball.
As a Cavs fan I cant wait to see Hughes and Lebron go at it together....I see a 10 assists season for Lebron and career high assist season for Hughes.
Andrew wrote:Out of those players, Hughes and Johnson are the best alternatives. Spree's not going to be around long enough for the pairing to pay off (obviously) and both Redd and Allen are effective #1 options, which remains LeBron's role in Cleveland.
I ask the question because I read a columnist article few days ago and he mentioned that Joe Johnson was the best player to be pair up next to Lebron James. Some of the reasons he mentioned was that JJ is more athletic than Larry, more potential to be discovered, younger, the ability to knock down the treys, so forth and so on.
Metsis wrote:LeBron will still gather all the defenders around him and Hughes will be more open than he was with the Wizards. LeBron could have used a good three point marksman at his side as that would spread the "love" defenses give a little more and give BronBron more space. Hughes will be a good fit for the job... Not the best, but he is still a very good player. One of the best at the defensive end and he can score.
I could see the Cleveland starting five as follows:
Ilgauskas - C
Gooden - PF
Marshall - SF
Hughes - SG
James - PG
This would allow Marshall to put his outside shot to some use and would allow James to handle the ball and the big lineup would be hard to match up against, with Hughes as the smallest player at 6'5"... And would almost guarrantee that Hughes would be going against smaller guys in almost every game and thus getting easy points... They would have a great rebounding quartet on the floor and Z is so big that it ain't too easy to get easy shots against him...
Dr. Funky wrote:I agree With -|NN|-[pF]-, I believe that point guards should be more pass-first oriented, and James also played point guard quite a bit during the beginning of his rookie season. Even though he played quite well at the 5 spot, he wouldn't have become the 20-5-5 player and won the rookie of the year if it wasn't for Jeff McInnis coming in and filling in the point.
maes wrote:Well obviously Ray Allen for talent and IQ but it wouldn't work out for either of them due to age differences.
air gordon wrote:maes wrote:Well obviously Ray Allen for talent and IQ but it wouldn't work out for either of them due to age differences.
what do you mean there 'due to age difference'?
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