he is a pure point but because of his size he plays every position
Exactly, KOB! Mr. Versatile! Put him at 1-5 and he'll be able to play each position with efficiency.
I tell 'ya.... I really want this kid.
Really amazed at the number of posters (mostly other boards) who've seen the videos of him, and DON'T see a guard. As if they think you're not as quick or fast as a Chris Paul you can't play a pg spot.
It reminds me of the Great Vin Scully calling a world seriese game, many years ago. ABC was carrying, and they had a split broadcast crew for 3 innings - the ABC guys, in this case Howard Cossell (yes, THAT long ago), and the participating team's broadcaster - Scully. Dodger 3rd basemen Ron "The Penguin" Cey was on 2nd base with two out, catcher Joe Fergueson was at the plate. Cosell was pontificating as always - "Fergueson will have to get at least a double to get the very slow Penguin home". To which Vinnie corrected him on the air. "That's a misconception about Ron, because of his build. He's not a fast runner. But he's a GOOD runner - he has AVERAGE major league speed - he can get home from 2nd on anything thru the infield". In other words, as fast as he needs to be to do the job. Not the fastest MLB guy, but he'd beat the absolute snot out of the average Joe in a footrace...
That was the same game Vin DIDN'T embarrass Howard by correctnig him on another point - also regarding Cey. When he'd come up to bat, Cossell referred to him as "The Penguin", then proceeded to tell the national audience that "of course, they call Cey the Penguin because he waddles like a duck". And while Vinnie bit his tongue on the air, a couple million Dodger fans were screaming at their TVs, "No, they call him Penguin because he waddles like a Penguin. If he waddled like a duck, they'd call him....THE DUCK"....
Anyway - I look at Anderson, and see a kid who could get it done from 4 positions - including the Point. Heck - he's at least as fast as Ernie DiGregorio - only 8 inches taller! I watched my Bruins win two NCAA titles with the equally slow John Vallely at the point - then 2 more with speed-challenged Greg Lee at the point - with Lee beating out cat-quick (and very talented) classmate Tommy Curtis for the job. Lee saw the floor better, could feed the bigs inside better (Walton), and (what he had in common with Vallely) while he didn't have a flashy handle, he had a SOLID handle - when Lee (or Vallely) brought the ball upcourt, you KNEW it would GET to the frontcourt - NO ONE took the ball from Greg Lee - if the break wasn't there, you knew he was getting the ball up the court, and the team into it's offense. That's very much what I see in Anderson. Whether it's from the 1, 2, 3, or 4. Whether he's primary bringing the ball up or secondary - he'll get his team into their offense.