First of all you didnt answer the question/s.
Second Moz played last night. I didnt see this destruction you speak of.
Third. Him playing against Howard is thousands of times better than him watching from the bench, or watching tape. No matter what the outcome is. If you cant understand the difference in actually playing against a player and watching I cant help you.
I remember a scrawny kid that the Pacers drafted. Rik Smits. Ewing absolutely abused him for a year or two. But then low and behold all that experience in actually PLAYING against Ewing took hold, and he was able to hold is own.
No matter how you slice it experience is always better than sitting on the side and watching...
Of course Moz played last night, and I would've clamored for him to do so eventually. I'm just arguing that D'Antoni benching him at the start of the season wasn't an idea that didn't have merit behind it.
You also can't compare him to Rik Smits because Smits was already a pretty talented area in many aspects when he came into the league. His rookie season he averaged 1.8 blocks per game.
Mozgov wasn't at that point yet. Mozgov was
extremely raw when he started out.
It's the same reason why a lot of rookies don't get playing time in their first season. They'll get
limited playing time while they spend time with the coaching staff and learn how to play the game.
Let's also not forget that Smits had four years of experience with the American style of basketball cause he was a college player here. Mozgov is a Euro player and the style of basketball in Russia is entirely different than it is here. It's important for him to take time and learn the game.
Dirk Nowitzki only played in half of the Mavericks' games his rookie season. In those games he averaged 20 minutes per game and he only started 24 games. Why? Because he was a raw player who was
entirely unaccustomed to the style of play in the United States and thus needed time to wise up and mature before he was inserted into the starting lineup.
Same goes for Mozgov. He had a good couple of months to sit and learn the game and work on his basic handling skills before he was ready to play. What's so bad about that?
For the record I'm not saying that benching him entirely was the best idea as I think he should've gotten playing time against some of the teams that killed us on the boards but we could've beaten otherwise (ie the KINGS, the SUNS), but there's a method behind D'Antoni's madness, that's all I'm trying to say.