Rose2Boozer wrote:Well, because there's the college game and then there's the pro game. The two levels are clearly not the same. Hunter shot a great percentage from three at Virginia. Do you think it will translate? My guess is no. Bridges had a great percentage and great volume from three at Villanova. Did it translate to his rookie year in Phoenix?
Why would he be expected to do more at the pro level? I guess that's the nature of lottery picks. They're drafted with the hopes of improvement. You don't think the team that drafts Hunter will want to see him play off the dribble more than he did in Virginia? Of course they will. Will he be successful? My guess is no. At the end of the day, DeAndre Hunter is a very good defensive prospect.
Yet, Bridges was still a positive impact player for Phoenix as a rookie. Shooting translates long-term; there are plenty of examples of good shooters who struggled as rookies: Kevin Durant, Reggie Miller, and Mark Price are a few of the prolific ones.
Plus, Hunter wasn't just a knockdown three-point shooter. I posted this a while back from his Synergy:

Even if you think his three-point shooting is fluky for the pro level (and why would you since, he he upped his percentage from .382 to .438 on the same volume), he's literally was good to great in every other offensive category last season. A team can wait on the chance that he gets stronger off the dribble (even though he isn't even remotely bad at it), while he contributes in other areas offensively and plays strong defense.
You mentioned improvement; Hunter improved significantly last season and shows all the signs of a player who will continue to do so. Again:
- Increased his 3P% from .382 to .438 on the same volume.
- Increased his efficiency from .584 to .618 TS% on the same volume
- Basically doubled his win shares from 3.7 to 7.3.
- Consistent regardless of the competition he faced. Here are Hunter's numbers in Conference Play last season (Per 40):
18.8 points
6.5 rebounds
2.5 assists
.532 FG%
.500 3P%
.628 TS%
24.9 PER
3.4 WS (led team)
Reminder: He played in the ACC, the strongest conference in basketball last season.
To recap, this is a player who:
- Is one of the most consistent players in the draft
- Added significant value on both sides of the ball
- Has little to no questions about basketball IQ
- Excelled as a pillar in one of the most defensively-demanding teams in the country,
- Is celebrated for his intangibles and decision-making
- Enters the league with one of the highest role player floors in the draft (a factor that contributed to unlikely rises for Paul George, Jimmy Butler, and Pascal Siakam).
And yet, we're supposed to believe that this is a profile of a player who will not translate to the NBA.
It doesn't vibe.