Indiana:
* Three of your five starters averaged in single digits last year, with your four starters not named Kobe combining for 40.2 points per game. Can you think of any team in recent memory that got so little production from 80% of its starting lineup?
* With little production coming from Kobe's supporting cast, and an admittedly weak bench, can Kobe do it alone? What's to stop teams from simply doubling Kobe all game?
Well, I don't believe that I'll be getting little production from 80% of my starting lineup. I believe I'll be getting a lot from Gasol, as mentioned. With fewer primary scorers than in Memphis, Gasol will get much more touches here and often times be an offensive focal point. He's very efficient, as noted, and I see him averaging from 16-20 ppg, which I don't find a far stretch of an improvement from last season's 14.6 on a team where he had to share 1 ball with Randolph, Gay, and Mayo. Thomas averaged 9.4 ppg in 22.6 mpg last season which would become 10+ in his 26 mpg in Indiana. Pietrus averaged 8.7 mpg in 22.5 mpg in Orlando which would becomes 10+ in his 26 mpg also. So, I actually have 4 starters scoring double digits in minutes that I really don't find unreasonable. That said, I would expect about 27-30 ppg from Kobe 42-47 ppg from my other starters.
I don't believe I admitted a weak bench; I admitted a weak bench defensively. I actually think I have a bench with players who are completely offensively geared:
Jonny Flynn (13.5 ppg)
Marco Belinelli (7.1 ppg)
Kyle Korver (7.2 ppg, 53.6 3pt%)
and Nenad Krstic (8.4 ppg in 22 min)
These are all guys who are known as being able to score and/or shoot. Along with Gasol, I don't think Kobe will be breaking his back to carry this team offensively every night. Like I said (or maybe it was in my erased write up), I will be looking to give it to Gasol in the low-mid post about every other possession early in the game.