…offensive end? If he was more aggressive using his quickness and speed as a slasher on offense, just with the thought in mind of collapsing the D and forcing it to adjust so he could kick out to open shooters it might be worth it to have him on the floor late in games when teams throw caution to the wind and start trying to attack the rim every possession.
If he just stands around on offense not being any kind of a threat it puts us in a 4 on 5 situation on the offensive end which puts us on our heels. I don’t think we have the individual scoring threats to offset having a guy on the floor that defenses don’t have to respect.
It’s an interesting thought though. The big thing is it can’t be timid/finesse player Trey Stewart, it needs to be active/disruptive/agitator Trey Stewart. If I was a coach I’d be interested in exploring this. I’ve always liked having specialists on the bench for when we needed a specific skill set based on matchups.