I just think we need more time, to be honest, before we decide anything. We still have 71 games to go
Take your Ingram example. He's been waaaaaay better this season than I thought he would. He's due
some regression, sure, and we've already seen some of it (he was shooting 68% from midrange, for example, about 5 games in and now he's down to about 60, which is still absurdly high and it may even drop somewhat from there, but it just demonstrates the point), but he has been much more willing to play off-ball, and his three point shooting has shot up in both volume and accuracy. Again, there may be some regression there (and already has been, in volume: he was shooting 50% on 6.4 a game through 5 games, and that's fallen to 46% on 5.4 through 9 games; still very very good, but it is a slight regression), but even if he only ended up around 4 3PAs a game at 40%, that would still be very good.
But the question is, is it impactful, or is it empty? So far, Ingram has been a -14.4 on/off. Is that just a result of the multiple losses early?
It definitely could be, Jrue was at a similarly awful on/off until last game, which improved him a little bit (still a -10 on/off, but that's an improvement). According to NBA tracking data, opponents are shooting about 2.6% better than their overall averages when guarded by Ingram. Is that just early season bad luck, given how many high level teams we've played, combined with the general bad-ness of our defense, or is his lack of strength on the inside and his relatively slow feet dragging him down?
Again, could be either.
We need more data. We need more games, to see more matchups, to let the averages settle a little, and to get the team healthier so we can actually see what we look like before we decide who to trade or who to max or who to extend or who to let walk. This is why I said I was reserving judgement until around Christmas, and that was before the Zion injury even happened. Given the impact of the Zion injury, it might be more sensible to wait until maybe the middle of January before making real judgements.