He was the alpha in New Orleans and didn't work out. But that's because Demps failed to surround him with talent and it was too late.
He can be the alpha here but he needs an all-star caliber #2 guy/ballhandler, and a #3 guy.
I don't think the issue in New Orleans was a lack of talent at the top of the roster. Jrue Holiday is a really solid #2/3. Cousins was very talented before his achilles injury. Randle is pretty good.
The issue is that the Pelicans never had enough guys to fill out a 8-9 man rotation with NBA-caliber role players. The complete lack of a supporting cast made it really, really difficult for them to be consistent enough to stay in the playoff running.
Well besides the fact they invested over $40 million in two back up centers in Alexis, Asik, and Solomon Hill might have led to that premise...
The only thing they desperately needed was more consistent shooters, defenders, and an actual wing that didn't suck.
Yeah I mean the simplest way I can put it is that I think Davis + Holiday + 3 average starters & 3-4 average bench guys would be enough for 50-55 wins unless they got slammed by injuries.
I don't. I don't think Jrue is even a top 40 player in the game.
I think the Pels won about as much as they could in an extremely tough Western Conference with the players that franchise surrounded Davis with.
You really mean that? That's a really weird position to take.
To me Holiday belongs in that secondary-option-group. For (shooting) guards: Beal, Oladipo, Holiday, DeRozan, Booker, Thompson, McCollum, Hield
And given his defense and playmaking skills, Holiday would be at the top end of that group. I'd only take Beal (and maybe Oladipo) before him (and Booker if we're talking about multiple seasons).
In fact I think Beal should have made an All-NBA team this year over Westbrook and that it was worth a discussion between Walker and Holiday.