My arguement for Iguodala as a potential top SG
Posted: Tue Jun 24, 2008 12:50 am
I'm copying most of this from something I posted at philaphans, and I'm sorry if it should be put within another post...
I am looking forward to Iguodala playing SG next to Young next year. Honestly, I don't think it will be a change in Iguodala's role (a Swing playing SG is much like a swing playing SF.) I am mostly looking forward to seeing Iguodala and Young grow into potentially the most dominant SG/SF tandem in the league- sort of what NJ envisioned from V.C. and R.J.- but more team oriented and much better on the defensive side of the ball.
Iguodala patterns his game after Kobe- which is a good idea since they are both athletic 6'6' swings who play effectively on both ends at SG, and Kobe is one of the all time greats at his position.
Note: KOBE IS MUCH BETTER THAN IGUODALA. My point is more that Iguodala can be a Kobe light for the Sixers. Sort of like the Drexler to M.J. (but of course MJ>Kobe and Drexler>>Iguodala.)
Here are the numbers to compare from 82games:
The comparison is valid because both carry the burden of being the focal point of their offense, and both play 40+ minutes, while often defending the opponents best SG/SF. Kobe gets bonus for not having a great PG and being able to keep up his numbers while shooting more (and that's why he will be in the HOF.) Iguodala gets bonus for having a worse talent level around him. he has lesser shooters and lesser post scorers to work off of.
Kobe: fg% .46, eFG% .50
Jumpers: 75% of total shot attempts, eFG% .457 on jumpers
Passer rating 9.7 (composite of assist and passing T.O.'s)
Reb rating 15.8
Drawn Foul%: 15.5%
Hands rating : 21 (amazing even for a top PG let alone a SG)
Steals: 1.8
Iguodala:fg% .456, eFG% .495 -> Same as Kobe
Jumpers: 72% of total shot attempts, eFG% .419 on jumpers
Passer rating 8.4
Reb rating 14.8
Drawn Foul%: 13.9%
Hands rating : 19 (also amazing even for a top PG let alone a SG)
Steals: 2.1
So using Kobe as the gold standard for what we want from Iguodala as a SG:
Iguodala needs to raise his fg% on jumpers by about 4% or more. Meaning he needs to hit 1 in 25 more jumpers than he does already- which should be an area that improves over the years since most good players develop better jumpers as they progress in the league. Otherwise, other than not taking as many shots, Iguodala has similar productivity and efficiency to Kobe.
What makes Kobe a superstar is that he can maintain reasonable efficiency AND be a superstar.
To his credit, Iguodala has shown that he can play 40+ min, and be the teams offensive and defensive focal point- which not many players can do. It does not put him at Kobe's level, but he is an impressive player.
I am looking forward to Iguodala playing SG next to Young next year. Honestly, I don't think it will be a change in Iguodala's role (a Swing playing SG is much like a swing playing SF.) I am mostly looking forward to seeing Iguodala and Young grow into potentially the most dominant SG/SF tandem in the league- sort of what NJ envisioned from V.C. and R.J.- but more team oriented and much better on the defensive side of the ball.
Iguodala patterns his game after Kobe- which is a good idea since they are both athletic 6'6' swings who play effectively on both ends at SG, and Kobe is one of the all time greats at his position.
Note: KOBE IS MUCH BETTER THAN IGUODALA. My point is more that Iguodala can be a Kobe light for the Sixers. Sort of like the Drexler to M.J. (but of course MJ>Kobe and Drexler>>Iguodala.)
Here are the numbers to compare from 82games:
The comparison is valid because both carry the burden of being the focal point of their offense, and both play 40+ minutes, while often defending the opponents best SG/SF. Kobe gets bonus for not having a great PG and being able to keep up his numbers while shooting more (and that's why he will be in the HOF.) Iguodala gets bonus for having a worse talent level around him. he has lesser shooters and lesser post scorers to work off of.
Kobe: fg% .46, eFG% .50
Jumpers: 75% of total shot attempts, eFG% .457 on jumpers
Passer rating 9.7 (composite of assist and passing T.O.'s)
Reb rating 15.8
Drawn Foul%: 15.5%
Hands rating : 21 (amazing even for a top PG let alone a SG)
Steals: 1.8
Iguodala:fg% .456, eFG% .495 -> Same as Kobe
Jumpers: 72% of total shot attempts, eFG% .419 on jumpers
Passer rating 8.4
Reb rating 14.8
Drawn Foul%: 13.9%
Hands rating : 19 (also amazing even for a top PG let alone a SG)
Steals: 2.1
So using Kobe as the gold standard for what we want from Iguodala as a SG:
Iguodala needs to raise his fg% on jumpers by about 4% or more. Meaning he needs to hit 1 in 25 more jumpers than he does already- which should be an area that improves over the years since most good players develop better jumpers as they progress in the league. Otherwise, other than not taking as many shots, Iguodala has similar productivity and efficiency to Kobe.
What makes Kobe a superstar is that he can maintain reasonable efficiency AND be a superstar.
To his credit, Iguodala has shown that he can play 40+ min, and be the teams offensive and defensive focal point- which not many players can do. It does not put him at Kobe's level, but he is an impressive player.