Kyrie is certainly no Magic Johnson when he talks, but he is certainly no Donald Trump, either. Trump rambles until he gets to a talking point, something that he knows will elicit a response. He rambles uncreatively and without thought (usually with an overt tone-deafness) until he gets to what he sees as the main point. People like Magic talk about whatever the heck they want to talk about, and they do it with such thoughtfulness and charisma that you can't help but love it. Kyrie was a sort of in-between. He understood what type of response he should have given, but he didn't necessarily convey that response correctly. He wove in some unnecessary clichés and had a few awkward moments where he tried to play the "awkwardly and endearingly laughs" card but didn't set it up correctly.
Kyrie is not really well-spoken in the truest sense of the term. He does ramble, showing depth of thought but not necessarily the attention or awareness necessary to articulate himself in a direct, understandable manner. His heart is clearly in the right place, which goes a long way, but his cadence and quick change of subject limits him from being a next-level communicator.
Kyrie is clearly thoughtful. His pronunciation of words is fantastic, he doesn't mumble, and he can clearly understand the mood of a room. His head was in the right place with respect to the undertone of all of his answers. He's definitely a thinker, someone who tries to put things in perspective and who isn't the stereotypical "dumb jock" or single-obsessed person who is only concerned with basketball. That goes a long way both in life and as the face of an organization.
I actually think Kyrie's praise for Brad Stevens was pretty indicative of the type of thinker Kyrie is. He talked about how Stevens understood the "flow" of a game- its ups-and-downs- and how Stevens could correctly position his team to precipitate and take advantage of the highs and mitigate and weather the lows. However, he didn't really convey his point well. Kyrie's admiration for Stevens and inherent understanding of how to run a basketball game was clear by the look in his eyes and his tone of voice, but he couldn't capture imaginations with his sentences.
All in all, I came away from the press conference thinking that Kyrie is definitely capable of assuming a "floor general" type role. He's not yet a LeBron or Magic level leader that can elevate a team every day by breaking things down for teammates from point guard through center, but he clearly naturally understands and is mentally capable of running at team and a game. I think taking that next step mentally and imposing his will on a game on a consistent basis is the evolution Kyrie thinks he can take that he would have never been able to do while playing with LeBron. Hopefully Brad can take Kyrie's natural talent and mold him into the all-around killer point guard that he and Danny think he can be.