Marcus needs to handle the ball more than Rozier in the second unit. He doesn't have the decision-making for a point guard.
Rosier seems to excel when he feels its his team. He's a volume scorer and Im not certain he fits this team. He's an excellent trade chip until he can be consistent with rotation players.
Exactly. He's best when he's the main guy out there and can worry about creating for himself. But he's not very good at involving others.
I just can't believe how brutal some of the people on this forum are, really!
Rozier has a total of 410 minutes of NBA experience and is playing what is arguably the hardest position in the game to learn.
He's already earned the respect of the coaches and of some of the more experienced guys on the team - I think he deserves to be cut some slack!
I think you're taking me wrong. I've really come around to like Rozier, but I just don't think he's an actual point guard. I think Smart needs to handle the ball more often, and Rozier can be the secondary ball-handler that primarily gets his own offense and occasionally offense for others.
I think he could be a good off-the-ball player for us in the second unit, too, because his shot is actually lightyears ahead of where it was advertised to be. As long as Rozier doesn't get too ball-dominant and focused on creating for himself, I really like the backcourt of him and Smart, though Rozier has to pick up his D. He was burned quite a bit today on gambles and being out of position.
I agree, i love Roziers game but doesn't mean it fits with what the team is trying to accomplish. He must prove to be a good playmaker and not just a good shot creator. At times tonight, he was a blackhole and you knew he was going to take a shot the moment he touched the ball. Its way too predictable.
Under different circumstances I would understand where you're coming from, but in Rozier's case I'm just not sure how you can fairly come to that conclusion.
Terry Rozier is not a natural pass-first PG. His natural talent set, even in college, was always been scoring first, defending second and play-making third. He's not incapable as a passer/play-maker, but it's not a natural strength of his either.
Unlike most rookies he got drafted to a team who already had a strong backcourt rotation (Thomas, Bradley, Smart, Turner) and so he didn't get the benefit of being able to play any meaningful regular season minutes as a rookie - the only meaningful minutes he got were the 15 MPG or so in those 6 playoff games. As such Rozier, for all intents and purposes, is pretty much still a rookie. It's going to take him time to get comfortable and play like it.
Look at Marcus Smart. Like Rozier, Smart was never a natural playmaker in college. He was a defender first, a scorer second, playmaker third. At the very start of his rookie season, defense was the only thing he was even remotely competent at - he looked lost trying to run the point, and he couldn't make a jumper or layup to save his life.
Smart has now played in a total of 138 NBA games, and he's played meaningful minutes in all of them, yet he still struggles with his decision making, still doesn't look completely comfortable running the point, and is still wildly inconsistent as a shooter/scorer.
But he's improving.
We've seen him working in the post more, we've seen him improve his shooting form, we've seen the development of his court vision and passing skills, etc. He's developing with time and is starting to look more and more like an all-round player.
Rozier, by comparison, has played 6 playoff games that involved actual meaningful NBA basketball - everything else was useless garbage time. He is practically still a rookie.
The court vision, decision making and passing skills will come - but they're going to take time. The first things we're likely to see from Rozier is probably going to be scoring, because that's what he's most naturally proficient at. The defense and decision making are going to take a bit longer to come around...but they'll come.