SelbyCobra wrote:These BPM numbers on Robinson are legitimately stunning. There are lots of rookies that come into the league, flash bright, and then eventually turn into stars as measured by that stat.
But almost UNIVERSALLY, no matter how good a guy eventually becomes their BPM will be atrocious as rookies - and sometimes even a year or two after that. No matter what you think about BPM as an evaluation tool, or even Mitch's specific production as measured by it, It is wildly intriguing that Mitch is at an historical level in a statistic that notoriously destroys rookies (they even mention it in the Bref glossary).
That was part of the appeal of KP to me his rookie season despite the horrific shooting - his BPM was actually above 0 (it was 0.2 both his rookie and sophomore seasons, then went to -0.7 in the year he hurt himself).
Meanwhile, here are the rookies since the inception of the 3P line to play as many minutes as Mitch (1100) and post a BPM over 5:
There's not a single non-star in there. So the Knicks either have the first guy in the modern NBA to fool the BPM metric, Mitch is doing something genuinely unique that BPM picks up on (not likely considering the raw data is gleaned from the box), or the Knicks have an NBA star on their hands.
THIS!!
Mitch has low key made himself untradeable. Sorry, AD!

































