I think you can compare our situation right now to the Boston Celtics. They did fairly well last year without their two best players, Hayward and Irving. Now this year those two are back and the Celtics have been just average so far.
We seem to have a really good thing going with our starting 5 right now. I think we have to be really careful about upsetting that momentum and consistency. Work Lard and Talley back in as players to come off the bench and play 3-5 minutes at a time. Allow them a few games to get familiar with the speed and style and effort and teamwork that our current starters have developed which has been working so well. I am hopeful CSP is slow to alter the current balance of power that has given us a good start to the season.
Nice point -- individual talent and athleticism matter, but this is fundamentally a team game. Sometimes you are more (or less) than the sum of your parts.
Virginia has the best defense season after season, but I would say none of the Cavaliers are terrific individual defenders. They just play a good system and play it together, and if somebody is not going to contribute to it, they are going to pay benchwarmer.
We stumbled into a lineup that works well together, even if we arrived at it through injuries and necessity instead of experimentation early in the season.
NWB as a distributing PG, who
can get his own, but mostly looks to facilitate
Haliburton concentrates on moving the ball and hitting open threes
Shayok and THT looking to score from the wing or look for the fast break
Jacobson always bringing energy and effort on the boards, but also looking to move the ball and being a perfect complement to Nick on the PNR action
Ball always moving, nobody is selfish, rarely do we take bad shots
On defense, they are switchtastic on the perimeter, almost 1-5 really, and smart about doubling in the post and recovery after a switch or mistmatch
This team is way more than the sum of its parts at the moment. That is great.
Introducing extraneous elements into a system that is working well is always a risk. If it is not broke, do not fix it. Wigginton and Lard were high-usage guys on a bad team last season, and while Lard was efficient mostly because of his rebounding, Wigginton was a bit of a chucker from mid-range and turned the ball over quite a lot.
He might be the best shooter on the team, though, and I know he can streak and drive at least as well as Shayok and Horton-Tucker, so there is a path for him to contribute greatly to this team (certainly more than the minutes turned in by Lewis and Griffin so far out there) if he makes the choice to play the same sort of role in the offense.
Wigginton is going to need to play like Haliburton -- a 3&D wing -- if he wants to contribute to the team. He is going to need to learn to share primary scoring duties with two others on the perimeter (Shayok and THT) with reduced touches, too, and to move the ball.
I do not know if that mixes with his NBA ambitions of being a PG when Nick is so obviously better at the role right now (or was last season). Is switching out Haliburton so Wigginton can try to play like Haliburton, not like LW last year, really an improvement?
I know Wigginton is more talented, but Haliburton is doing his job to a tee right now.