HEZI wrote:cgf wrote:HEZI wrote:
He's a forward who can play the 3 or the 4. Neither Randle nor Obi can play the 3. Simple and plain
This is assumption is what I am disagreeing with & why I'm suggesting you watch more of him. He doesn't have the feet/lateral-quickness to play the 3 & defend on the perimeter regularly, either, but he's doing an excellent job around the rim and on the glass...which is why I like him so much as a playmaking 4 & have him above Barnes on my PF rankings despite the slow start.
And I'm going to say it again, the NBA is full of versatile players throughout all the positions. So it's always about matchups and depending on the team the matchups change. Zion Williamson plays the 4 and he still can't defend the pick and roll or some 1 on 1 matchups and gets cooked regularly. In the NBA you still have to defend the pick and roll/pop and be able to switch on to other defenders if you want to be labeled a good defender. If you can't then you will be a bad defender no matter what so it's going to be up to the team to help cover your weaknesses in those areas. Learning better defensive discipline can help and those things can come with better coaching and better team concepts and skill and communication but overall if you can't defend on the perimeter then you aren't automatically excused from that responsibility in the NBA by playing the 4. Some nights you are going to be matched up with a low post big and others you are going to see a face up ball handling scorer and other nights it's a stretch. At the 3 you might be matched up with a 3 and D guy who stands in the corner all game waiting for a kickout one night and then a ball handling scorer another night or a motion offense shooter who comes off multiple screens on another night. There's a bunch of talent in the NBA right now at every position and a lot of versatility throughout all the positions.

*read "the point" instead of "the joke"
Keep watching Jalen on the defensive end. If you do, I'm sure you'll start to understand why I'm contesting the idea of him regularly defending on the perimeter at the NBA level* & why I view him as a big who should have some switchability, rather than as a perimeter guy who can play up. His offensive versatility doesn't equate to defensive versatility.
*of course there will be nights against teams with 3s who can't score or teams who use skilled 4s at the 3, like Gordon (ORL) or MPJ (DEN), when the opponent is too slow or unskilled to burn you if you play a skilled 4s like JJ (or Julius) down, but those will be the exceptions and not what you should draft him to regularly do.