Okay, so reading between the lines, lots of people seem to be concerned that Thomas will take playing time from smart. And, he will.
Bottom line is, smart needs to be good enough. If he isn't, he isn't.
Eh you can be a great player and have your development stunted by being put into a minor role or just kept from handling the ball much, etc. etc.
I think Smart will have plenty of opportunities, but players don't succeed or fail entirely on their own talent. Fit, coaching, and enviroment matter a lot.
Disagree wholeheartedly. "Great" players succeed no matter what. As they say, cream rises to the top. It's the specialist role player types that depend heavily on the situation.
So what will smart be? If he's the star many want him to be, then thomas is insignificant. If he isn't, then I see the concern.
Great talents fail all the time, often until they find the right coach or situation. Enviroment and opportunity matter a lot, and when you're dealing with high stakes situations like the NBA you need to maximize a talent's chances.
It is hindsight silliness of saying that all great players succeed no matter what because you know they're great because you've seen them be great. So of course they'd have been great anywhere.
I can think of maybe a handful of "great" players that bounced around before becoming great. Maybe Chauncey Billups. Who else?
Every one else that bounced around and became good NBA were not great themselves, just in great situations. So the question is, what do we think Marcus Smart will be? A consistent all-star? A fringe all-star? Well then, he should get there regardless of Thomas.
People act like NBA players only grow in games. These guys are practicing all the time. Coach sees these guys more than they would care to mention and they know exactly what they can andc can't do. They also know exactly what kind of potential they have and can reasonably predict where they will go.
So if smart is that star player many are hoping for, the little bitty Isaiah Thomas should or cannot stand in his way. Period, point-blank, end of story.