People have a misconstrued, negative notion of what a sixth man really is.
Look, IT played absolutely outstanding tonight offensively, but he also was pretty terrible defensively. He provides no resistance to Teague defensively (or most point guards for that matter), which isn't ideal for your starting point guard.
Ideally, he is the sixth man on a contending team where he can be a high usage, high scoring leader of the bench mob. I don't see why this is such a controversial notion with some of you. The environment our present team consists of is the absolute perfect combination for IT to star as a scoring, All-Star starter on our team. However, we're far from being a real contender, and real contenders don't have huge gaping holes that can be consistently exploited.
On January 13, 2015, Mo Williams scored 52 points - does that necessarily mean he should be a starter and not a sixth man? Absolutely not.
Jamal Crawford (the prototypical sixth man) has long went on huge scoring binges like IT night, and he was doing it from the bench. Does that mean he should start and not be a sixth man? Absolutely not.
I still believe that IT's ideal role is a sixth man scorer off of the bench, and that's not too crazy of an idea to have just because he occasionally has big scoring nights like tonight. He's tailor-made for being today's prototypical sixth man, and I'd love him to be that for us, just like Crawford is for LA.