lawdog1
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Let me ask you this Erupt, others feel free to chime in...
I think JJ is the most important player on our team offensively. When he's on our offense looks like one of the top 3 best in the league. When he's off, we barely score 90 points. His movement and gravity is invaluable.
However, come playoff time he consistently comes up short. This is starting to lead me to believe that the way our team is constructed, we depend so much on JJ's movement and shot making that it kills us in the postseason because he isn't big enough, or flat out good enough to warrant that amount of responsibility. He's not Klay Thompson and while he is a good positional defender, having him guard CJ McCullum like last night, or Harden last season is not ideal. He would be guarding Klay Thompson and / Or Harrison barnes next rd if we were to get there, which is a matchup problem in it of itself.
The thinking here is that by moving JJ to the bench or trading him for some pieces, we could get someone in return who's a better defender / athlete in that position. He obviously wouldn't be as good of a shooter as redick but that's kind of null and void because he can't generate nearly the clean amount of looks come playoff time.
In a nutshell, he's just not big or good enough to warrant the amount of responsibility that the Clippers offense places upon him and that's why he comes up short every postseason because he has to go up against wings with size and length which really disrupts what he and the clips do offensively.
I see what you're saying, but I don't think the problem is as much with JJ himself as how they use him. The do rely too much on him. Particularly early in games, the team treats him like the fist option when he should really be the 3rd or 4th.
I wouldn't be opposed to shopping him necessarily, but I think he is good enough, including on defense, to be the starting 2 on a team that can compete for a championship. But that's with a health Blake and CP being the primary options on offense and JJ getting more complementary open looks.