So Portland can't stop Chris Bosh with any one player. How does Houston stop the height from any two of Portland's bigs? Bosh can't cover both guys at once, right?
It's a fair question. And I think the wait-and-see approach is reason #1A I'm expecting to get trounced in tomorrow's poll.
I know you, Hobbs, and others are betting against Randolph, Andersen, Blair and Powe. But as I've said I expect to have two NBA starters, and two solid rotation players.
I believe David Andersen will acquit himself well. I'm not sure that finesse is a dirty word in the league. And while rebounding isn't his strong suit. I still argue that no one plays minutes (and wins a Championship) for Ettore Messina if they aren't playing hard, playing fundamentally sound basketball and boxing out.
As for Anthony Randolph, I end up leaning on Per36 numbers, April starts, and Summer League games. But isn't part of the fun of following this league, getting overly exited about the possibilities and a high strung, everywhere on the court 6'11" and 1/2 PF/C/SF 20 year old?
DeJuan Blair, on the other hand - I believe a lot of NBA fans who don't follow the NCAA closely don't have a good sense of how dominant Blair really was last season. He's quick, he got more steals than most guards. He has a 7'3" wingspan. He didn't miss a game or practice in two seasons at Pitt. He hammered opposing players in team workouts.
I had Blair as a top six pick in the wake of a sophomore season in which he shattered modern records for offensive rebounding and shared Big East Player of the Year honors with No. 2 overall pick Hasheem Thabeet. Few of the NBA's successful undersized power forwards projected out as well as rookies.
But all I can really say is we'll see...