I've always thought that his best use is as a 3rd that can play heavy minutes because of his defense and ability to complement the other guard so well, but a contender probably has a better starting SG option.
However...
If Rondo is the other guard, handling the ball all the time, covers his greatest weakness. As for height, it seems that his defense is just fine as-is.
AB is in the 3-guard rotation either way. He can probably guard anybody at the G-spot.
The other guard has to be a SG, though, to fill out the 3-G rotation. We seem to have several to choose from, young and veteran.
Next to Bradley, a ball-dominating guard is what you want...so he doesn't handle it. Otherwise, it's a rather predictable pass-and-cut offense; nobody can actually do anything with the ball.
Enter MarShon Brooks, who will have to beat out a young competitor in Crawford (no problem), and still has two veterans ahead of him if he fails to execute consistently.
Whether or not Bradley is the answer at SG depends on whether we can get or grow another SG that can make the 3-guard rotation without beating him out for the starting spot, and who can perhaps initiate offense on his own (making him better off the bench).
This is going to be one heck of a season to see what works and what doesn't. This guard try-out is as interesting as the similar situation happening at the FC spot, where there are young players with solid veterans (sort of) ahead of them, who they have to beat while also learning to gel with the other young guy (we hope and pray).
But yes, I like Avery in the 3-guard rotation, and if it works with him starting, and I think it could, then fine.
Whew.
And if he does work at SG, we may very well already have the starting 5 for the next title team on our roster.
Stay Green, my friends.