mellow
Well-Known Member
Unless if our offense is going to change
Ty Corbin said he is considering changing the offense to go to a two gaurd front. I think that move would be made to put the ball in the hands of Mr. Gordon Hayward.
Unless if our offense is going to change
Finally some people are starting to like Jordan Hamilton.
2011 NBA Draft – Jordan Hamilton Strengths
* Is considered a pure shooter with NBA range
* Quick release and able to catch and shoot.
* Perfect size to play the wing in the NBA.
* Has shown the ability to post-up smaller players.
* Is explosive in the open court.
2011 NBA Draft – Jordan Hamilton Weaknesses
* Free throw shooting
* Shot selection can be lacking at times.
* Needs to work on his aggressiveness in driving to the basket.
* Court vision.
I can't believe he is supposed to go mid first round. I'd be thrilled if we got him at 12. I know its a VERY big stretch but he reminds me of Danny Granger or Kevin Durant. A bigger wing that can finish well, is athletic and long and has deep range. If he is anything close to Granger, why wouldn't you take that with the 12th freakin pick
The times I have seen Hamilton I have noticed he is a natural scorer/shooter. Doesn't create for himself except in the post against smaller players. Not a very good ball-handler or passer. Seem to be a defender who lacked the lateral quickness to put pressure on the other team. He also has the CJ Miles syndrome of "if I hit my 2 first shots I am going to be hot and play with energy". I would take Burks, Jimmer or Leonard over Hamilton. Heck I would take Nolan Smith over Hamilton. I don't see him as a player who making winning basketball plays.
Source ESPN.com"Last year Texas Longhorns head coach Rick Barnes decided it was time to scrap his one-dimensional, pick-and-roll game plan. Barnes polled his NBA contacts about the toughest pro offenses, and when the Jazz emerged as the unanimous response, he flew to Salt Lake. Jazz GM Kevin O'Connor says he saw his team's imprint on the Longhorns as soon as the new season started. Flex cuts, screening the screener and weak-side curls had taken over the Erwin Center floor.
No one is happier about the transformation than Jordan Hamilton. He is averaging team highs in points 18.7 PPG and rebounds 7.6 RPG, but more important, he is scoring in more varied ways than ever before. According to Synergy Sports Technology, 20.5 percent of his shots come off of screens or post-up moves (that number was 5.1 percent last year), and he has improved his points per possession on nearly every type of play. "You could put him in a phone booth, and he'd figure out how to score," says Oklahoma coach Jeff Capel."