campaignist
Well-Known Member
Silly argument. Do you know what’s different now than 3+ years ago? Those guys he developed are filling his rotation. Even as a winning team with very few rotation spots open, Quin has developed players. Forrest has gotten better, Niang got better, Clarkson had a career year last season, before that Tony Bradley improved immensely over his time here.
There are zero coaches in the NBA who are going to bench Jordan Clarkson so they can put in an unknown late 2nd round or undrafted player. People got to realize that the reason a lot of the fringe guys don’t end up making is 1) because they probably weren’t good enough in the first place and 2) there was no realistic opportunity for them to play in the first place.
I can't believe people haven't mentioned that Quin's greatest accomplishment developing players is Donovan Mitchell. He slid to 13 because he couldn't dunk off one leg, now look at him.
That said, I've definitely been critical of young guys not being given time to develop. The last 3 years, they've been focused on winning a title, and therefore giving the 8 man rotation as much experience as possible,
so I get it. But time could have been made to slot in guys like Forrest, Oni, Morgan, etc. to give them more of a chance. The need for a perimeter defender has been glaring for years, I'm not sure
enough effort was made to bring up someone who could do that. But, then again, I'm not a coach, and I'm not the one that catches heat if you sub out a starter when you're up 10 and the other team
goes on a 12-0 run.
