I said consistently shoot the 3 at an above average clip. I think most of those guys actually do, but I'm really not gonna waste the time over such a miniscule point. Now how many of those guys also play great defense, rebound, assist, and aren't one dimensional offensive players? And how many of them would you actually consider better players overall than Iguodala?
You're missing the point. Nobody's saying ship Iguodala out of town. What we are saying is that this team, as currently constructed, is going to have a hard time.
Second, whether or not they're better players isn't really relevant. The point is not just collecting talent, but collecting talent that can fit and get the most out of each other.
I do believe a trio of Miller/Iguodala/Young on the perimeter is not going to work out to the extent of being a championship caliber team. If you take that, and believe that Young is a potential star, and that Iguodala has the most attractiveness in a trade, and that Iguodala might be drastically overpaid shortly, then I don't think it's ridiculous to bring up the notion of a trade.
Finally, you talk about distorting stats, then pick 35% for Kobe, when his previous two years were 34.8% and 34.4%. Coincidence? Probably not. Kobe's outside shot has been steadily improving for the last 4 years, from 32.7% to 33.9% to 34.8%, then 34.4% to 36.1%. As such, I put more weight in his being able to make 1.8 per game this year at 36.1% than I do his making 0.5 per game at 26.7% in 1998. This is way career stats on a guy like Kobe distort the quality of shooter he has become. If you haven't recognized that Kobe is a vastly superior outside shooter to Andre Iguodala, then we'll have to agree to disagree.