you're certainly entitled to your opinion, as tragically short-sighted as it is. but i disagree mightily: we know
exactly what we have with evans: play him on ball, and he's 20/5/5 on any given night. if his jump shot (or, at the very least his confidence in his jump shot) is truly improving, then you're looking at a potential all-star. his court vision has always been much better than you've ever given him credit for, and there are certainly players that exist you can pair him with. he had success with beno udrih starting alongside him, and there are dozens of players like that in the nba. when he isn't being sabotaged by his own coaching staff, he does his job well, he doesn't complain, and he's the best individual defender on his team by a mile (a fact that really should not be overlooked as often as it is when assessing evans' overall talent)...
edit: and people talk about how "things should be getting better" as if nba players exist in a vacuum where factors outside of themselves don't contribute to their successes and failures. i give you exhibit a:
j.j. hickson. he played very well for a lengthy stretch of games in cleveland before being traded to the kings, where he performed horribly, counter to expectation. so we cut him loose, and now he's playing in portland, to the tune of nearly 11 pts per game on 52% shooting, to go with 9.6 rebs per game in only 28.5 minutes per game. he's had great success
on either side of his time in sacramento, and that should very loudly and very clearly tell you something: maybe the problem isn't that these very young talents that sacramento brings in are all as undisciplined and disappointing as they seem, but maybe the problem is instead that the kings franchise has done very little to help equip them with the tools necessary to discipline their individual games, to grow them as a team, to develop their chemistry, etc., etc., etc.
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