magius wrote:thats just embarassing. especially the quotes from rose. for me, it exposes the fact that bosh is basically just an average player putting up good numbers on a horrendously crap team. for me, the guy just doesnt seem to have franchise player material.... and by franchise player material, i dont mean steve francis, i mean winning franchise player material. soon canada will have zero nba teams.
You sir, are completely retarded. Because of one loss, the 5th largest city in North America and its massive fanbase will no longer have a basketball team? Put the pipe down, son.
As for disparaging Bosh, what else COULD he have done? 27 and 12 is not insignificant...
magius wrote:we stopped using pipes a long time ago, gramps.
i dunno. win, maybe?
assumptions, assumptions, assumptions, all you've got is assumptions and ifs and buts. worthless. lets stick to what we do know, why dont we. the raptors didnt win. just the raptors. only the raptors. yes, the toronto raptors. truth hurts.
and im not a canadian hater, i liked the vancouver grizzlies. lets just say ive seen shareef and i've seen chris bosh. this kid has peaked or is close to, he may go jermaine o'neal on me, but i seriously doubt it, more like jonanthan bender with minutes
raptors leave toronto if they continue suck for as long as the grizz did in vancouver.
that toronto lost to a team full of castoff nba players is embarassing, no matter what you say. you dont expect an nhl team to lose to a minor league hockey team, and so to with even the lowly raptors.
One player is nothing, even the greatest of the greats needed good teammates and good coaching to win. You cannot lay anything on Bosh's shoulders if he performed well and his teammates choked it.
You just don't know what you're talking about. The Raptors ARE mostly a collection of NBA cast-offs. They are not a cohesive unit, not constructed well, not possessed of any of the major advantages of American basketball except in the form of Chris Bosh, what else do you want from them? They're among the worst teams in the league and they still only lost by 2 because they couldn't hit their foul shots, which is not terribly common for them.
One player is nothing, even the greatest of the greats needed good teammates and good coaching to win. You cannot lay anything on Bosh's shoulders if he performed well and his teammates choked it.
Now who's dealing in ifs and buts, eh? Shareef Abdur-Rahim was never as good on defense as Bosh was playing out of position at C as a ROOKIE... As a sophmore, he showed comparable scoring and rebounding talent and you say he's peaked? That makes no sense. He's young and still learning the game.
alexboom wrote:Mmmh pretty strange... a team lead by 2 players who may be at best good backups in NBA beat a NBA team who used its players as if it was a regular season game.
magius wrote:1. technically the raptors are not castoffs, considering they are in the nba. if they werent in the nba then they'd be castoffs. they may be castoffs of better teams, but either way they are still in the nba, which logically would mean they are at least slightly superior to those who arent. they lost to the guys who were cast off for them, which kind of says something, huh.
2. lose by 2, lose by 20. you lose, you lose.
yeah, even the greatest of the greats needed good teammates and good coaching to win..... against teams that were actually in their 'supposed' calibre.
no more so than you are at this point on this topic. potential? prove it. show me. he's athletic? is he more athletic than stromile swift? defense? he may have the edge over shareef...... then again that may just be pyschological considering their body types, hype, and on coart demeanor. 1.4 bpg is not spectacular for a big man with hops, in fact shareef averaged around 1 and 1 steal per game his first 2 seasons. and in the end, both teams suck defensively anyhow.
either way bosh doesnt seem for me to be the type to be a defensive anchor, all in all, at his best, he probably has around average man on man, slightly above average help defense.
Err? Comparatively, the level of talent on the Raptors compared to that of most other NBA teams is low; Loren Woods has been around the league, Hoffa hasn't had a chance to get cast-off yet, they ran Milt Palacio at the point the last two years, had Rafer Alston who's been on a couple of different teams, now have Mike James who's REALLY traveled across the league and a European player (!!) at that position.
You're right, the term "cast-off" isn't technically correct but if you're trying to argue talent, then it's a bad angle. Yes, a guy like Morris Peterson is generally more individually talented than Maceo Baston...
But individual talent doesn't matter as much in the right kind of team concept. Detroit showed that the team-over-individual philosophy is effective anywhere, even in the NBA.
What does that mean? Jordan's Bulls lost lots of games when he was younger. And he was far better than Bosh. Garnett's teams didn't exactly do resoundingly well either, if you'll recall. I could go on.
First, any player that can contribute with help-defense doesn't "suck" on D, it means they're a liability in man-to-man coverage which can be overcome with a partial zone. Bosh is a pretty good shot-blocker and he's not actually a defensive liability at PF. His opponents at that position shot an iFG% of 38%. That's pretty good. Duncan's opponents at PF shot 42%, for comparison.
Greater potential? OK, he's extremely young, he's shown improvement from year to year, he works hard and adds new things to his game... What else do you want? Potential isn't solely based on athleticism as you seem to imply with your Stro comment.
Show me why Bosh CAN'T improve as a player? What's holding his potential back? He can't be a dominant back-to-the-bucket player because of his build, true. But he's quicker than most PFs and Cs and can face up very well. He can also shoot it out to NBA three-point range (though he's by no means as good as someone like Dirk) and has an excellent mid-range game. I can think of only two or three other bigs who have a pull-up J in their arsenal as good or better than Bosh's.
magius wrote:
you can say that the raptors have a couple of potential true castoffs (even though, techincally, they arent...yet), but the worst player on the raptors roster, talent wise, is at least equal to most of the maccabi starters. is it not logical that if a maccabi starter could play and were offered a spot on the raptor bench he would be there in a heartbeat? and if not, as the case is, we have to ask why the raptors bench is the raptors bench and not the maccabi starters if maccabi is such a good team. the reasoning would be that, talent wise, maccabi is not fit to be the raptors bench..... and that my friend, is a pretty bad diagnosis. that a starting 5 that arent fit to be the raptors bench beat the raptors starters is downright embarassing, no matter how you angle it.
which brings us to your next point that teamwork outweighs talent, which i cant disagree with. considering maccabi has very little talent, we are assuming that they beat the raptors with, lets say, 99% teamwork. okay, faintly posssible. i still do not see where this argument leads, what are you trying to say? that its not the players fault that they dont play together well? if a team loses, who's fault is it? mine?
yeah, but they didnt lose to maccabi![]()
find where i said chris bosh's defense sucks and quote it. i said average man on man and above average help defense, which would amount to slightly above average total defense. i did not diss his d, i just dont think its sufficient enough for the raptors to realistically build around him and amount to....anything.
oh is that potential? shareefs first two years:
18.7 ppg, 6.9 rpg, 453% fg, 2.2 apg
22.3 ppg, 7.1 rpg, 485% fg, 2.6 apg
potential means nothing until proven,
and even if proven does not guarantee the player is the type of player to build a franchise around.
i will not argue the fact that bosh may improve his numbers, which he undoubtebly will on such a shit team,
but i do argue the fact that he does have what it takes to be a franchise player that wins. he does not have the body type, post game, explosive athleticism or spectacular mid range game to change a game,
nor do i think he will devolop any one of those skills sufficiently.
winner? sorry, no.
and of course, potential is size and body type.
i cant honesly show you without sounding ridiculous, just as you cant guarantee he will. i just personally think, that he has pretty much peaked, of course he will improve a little in some departments, but i dont think significantly. its just my hypothesis, which of course means absolutely nothingtime will tell.
sorry, i still dont think bosh is winner material. im willing to give you the possibility of him one day being an all star, but if a team builds around him, i believe whatever team that is is destined to very early offseasons.
magius wrote:everyone likes a smart ass. more like shareef, antawn jamison or steve francis.
tsherkin wrote:Yeah, there's no sense mis-stating what the Raptors are right now:
Right now, the Raptors are a bottom-of-the-barrell team that will almost certainly miss the playoffs no matter HOW hard they play, unless CV, Jose and Joey Graham friggin' tear it up as rookies. *prays*
The point is not about the Raptors though, the point is what can Bosh bring to a team and this ridiculous Darko vs. Bosh comparison.
Darko's style of ball is essentially the same as Bosh's, so magius appears to not have any clue what he's saying. He's a thin, face-up big man and his main advantage is that he's 2 years younger and 2 inches taller. He's still a guy who relies on athleticism (which isn't transcendant, "only" very good) and his mid-range game. He is even less of a true post player than Bosh. So I don't know where this "I'd take Darko kuz he has more potential" business comes from.
What can Bosh bring to a team? He's shown already that he can be a strong offensive option. He can be a significant scorer and he has made a huge leap since his rookie season. Any improvement this year will only further cement that he's a strong offensive player. He's superior to Shareef in this regard because not only does he not die in the crunch but he's more assertive and versatile.
He's about the same level as a rebounder, which isn't bad nor is it superior but he contributes well enough there. He doesn't have the athleticism or strength to be a 12+ rpg player but that's OK. Between Bosh, CV and Joey Graham once they develop, it shouldn't be the major issue it is now.
Defensively, he can be an average man-to-man defender and a strong weakside help defender, which is enough from him and more than many "superstar" players and "gamechangers" bring to the table. Is he Dikembe Mutombo? No. Is he Ben Wallace? No. Is he Rasheed? No. But he's certainly not a liability and I go could on at length about franchise players that are.
So your argument that he doesn't have the potential to be a superstar player again fails because there's nothing about him to suggest that he cannot further improve over where he is now. There's no close ceiling for him as a player.
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