Pump the brakes. All Star potential? He can't guard guys. His lateral movement is scary bad. He's a potentially elite streak shooter, but I don't see his ceiling higher than Terrence Ross. He has poor core strength.
I have higher hopes for Begarin, who has a much stronger body and can defend multiple positions.
Ime and Brad are going to go for defensive oriented teams. It all starts with defense. Look at the transactions. Sign Smart to multi year deal, let Fournier walk. Trade for Richardson. Trade for Dunn.
All of the depth chart projections on CS show Nesmith as starting or first wing off bench, and Romeo relegated to 3rd string or DNPCD, I suspect when the team plays games in the fall, we will see Romeo getting more PT than Nesmith, ahead of him in the rotation. He's a much better defender. He STARTED for Brad during the playoff series vs Brooklyn, and played quite well under the circumstances (we were outmatched by superior opponent, and were without Brown, etc.) Unpopular take, I know. I recognize flaws in Romeo, and have been disappointed in his failure to assert himself more during summer league. His shots per game was probably less than 10. But that profile (low usage, elite multi-positional defender) will be in high demand next to Tatum and Brown. And his 3 point shot is starting to look acceptably close to league average of late.
There's pumping the breaks, and then there's crashing the car. Ross doesn't play like Nesmith that similarly at all.
There's nothing particularly streaky about Nesmith's shooting. It trended upward every month (besides the playoffs, but he was not alone). His monthly 3 point percentages went: 29 -> 31 -> 42 -> 27 -> 41 -> 44.
Langford has no business getting minutes ahead of Nesmith because we have to play 4v5 on the offensive end whenever he's out there.
I'll wait for Ime to decide who gets minutes. Trust his judgment more than yours. Or mine. My gut instinct tells me we will see Romeo play as much or more than Nesmith. Because he is superior defensively.
Romeo didn't just get minutes because of his defense, which I would agree is good and improving.
Romeo is generally not being given enough credit for what he contributes on offense. Offense is not just shooting %s. This is basketball, not HORSE.
Offense is about more than shooting, but Romeo hasn't showed much of anything positive on that side. He's been an extremely poor shooter, he's scored at a very poor rate, he's gotten assists at a very poor rate, and he's gotten to the line at a very poor rate.
What do you think he contributes on offense that he should get credit for?
I think that Goukii is right: you can make a strong argument that he's the worst offensive guard in the NBA during his career to date.
Per-36 averages for his career: 7.4 points, 1.4 assists, 1.2 turnovers, 35.3% FG%,.388 eFG%, 2.0 FTAs
His PER is 5.2, which is anemic. His ORtg was 95, which means the team performs very poorly on offense when he's on the floor (and he had a very poor 116 DRtg last season, too, meaning the heralded defense didn't have much positive impact).
All of this could of course change, but in his NBA career to date, he deserves zero credit for anything positive offensively. He needs to make extremely significant strides to be considered even a below-average offensive player.