At this point, I think the Jazz are still in the stages of figuring out how high the ceilings of Favors, Kanter, and Burks reach. I agree whole-heartedly Al Jefferson should not be the #1-option as this team looks to grow over the next few years, but I don't think it's imperative to cement in stone "_____
will be our #1-scoring option for the 2011-12 season."
Long-term you want this team to eventually have a "go-to scorer," but if we move Big Al and start the season with more of a collective mindset where we get a little bit from everyone on different nights, that's not a bad option and we've seen it work just this past season when Big Al was out. What it does is it buys you some time and lets some guys develop and gets you to the summer of 2013 instead of settling and trying to force pieces together when there may not be any better alternatives on the market.
Should your best defender also be your #1 scoring option? I don't want Favors holding back on D because we need him to be on the floor to score 20 a night. How often do we see bigs with the mindset of playing soft defense in order to stay out of foul trouble so they can get more touches on offense?
Never seemed an issue with Tim Duncan, Dwight Howard, LeBron James, Kevin Garnett (T-Wolves), Hakeem Olajuwon, Patrick Ewing, Alonzo Mourning, ect.
You don't see it often because few players have the ability to be factors at both ends of the court, but if Favors develops the ability to be a #1-option you don't purposely hold him back from that because if he's
that good he can figure out how to be a major factor at both ends. (fwiw I don't think Favors is a go-to scorer right now, but I think he
can become a very good scorer and presence in the post - which is why the Jazz need to stay patient and open-minded in his developmental process and not automatically relegate him to a complementary scorer).