“I mean, I’m working harder and harder on it each an every day, but it’s there,” he said. “Y’all just didn’t see my little stroke. I got a stroke.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/wi ... story.html
If anyone can fix a bad shot it's MKG.
Moderators: nate33, montestewart, LyricalRico
“I mean, I’m working harder and harder on it each an every day, but it’s there,” he said. “Y’all just didn’t see my little stroke. I got a stroke.”
nate33 wrote:Holy crap, Andre Drummond is LONG! 6-11.75 in shoes. 7-6.5 wingspan.
Quincy Miller has great length too. 9-1 standing reach
Austin Rivers has terrible size. 8-1 standing reach. His shoulders must attach to his torso somewhere near his kidneys.
Rafael122 wrote:I disagree, he's a two guard. MKG is 6'5.75 in socks, 6'7.5'' in shoes, has a 7 inch wing span and 8'8.5'' reach. So put that in perspective, Beal is three inches shorter and their wingspans are close.
Anthony Davis has a 9 inch standing reach...and he's 7 inches taller than Beal, perspective.
nate33 wrote:Tyler Zeller has a terrible standing reach of 8-8. That's weird since he's over 7 feet in shoes with a 7-foot wingspan.
The comparison of Sullinger and Robinson is odd. Both guys are 6-7.75 in socks. Robinson has an amazing 7-3.25 wingspan and Sullinger's wingspan is a respectable 7-1.25. But Sullinger has a one-inch greater standing reach. It's like his shoulders are mounted on top of his torso instead of on the sides.

Nivek wrote:nate33 wrote:Holy crap, Andre Drummond is LONG! 6-11.75 in shoes. 7-6.5 wingspan.
Quincy Miller has great length too. 9-1 standing reach
Austin Rivers has terrible size. 8-1 standing reach. His shoulders must attach to his torso somewhere near his kidneys.
Drummond's standing reach is right at average for a drafted center.

nate33 wrote:Nivek, from looking at your YODA data, do you have a sense whether standing reach or wingspan is more influential? And in particular, I'm curious about guards. My intuitive sense is that standing reach is more important for bigs but wingspan may be more important for guards and wings.


pcbothwel wrote:nate33 wrote:Nivek, from looking at your YODA data, do you have a sense whether standing reach or wingspan is more influential? And in particular, I'm curious about guards. My intuitive sense is that standing reach is more important for bigs but wingspan may be more important for guards and wings.
I agree Nate. I have always thought this just like I believe that 2 foot power jumpers (i.e. Dwight Howard, Jason Richardson, etc.) are better for bigman and 1 foot jumpers/striders are better for guards.
Code: Select all
Name Year HTnoSH HTwSH Weight Span Reach
Bradley Beal 2012 6'3.25" 6'4.75" 6'8" 8'3"
Brandon Roy 2006 6'5.25" 6'6.25" 207 6'8" 8'5"
Rudy Fernandez 2005 6'4.75" 6'6" 172 6'7.5" 8'5.5"
Corey Brewer 2007 6'6.75" 6'7.75" 185 6'8.25" 8'7"
Evan Turner 2010 6'5.75" 6'7" 214 6'8" 8'7.5"
Nivek wrote:Rafael122 wrote:I disagree, he's a two guard. MKG is 6'5.75 in socks, 6'7.5'' in shoes, has a 7 inch wing span and 8'8.5'' reach. So put that in perspective, Beal is three inches shorter and their wingspans are close.
Anthony Davis has a 9 inch standing reach...and he's 7 inches taller than Beal, perspective.
MKG's standing reach is average for a drafted SF. Beal's is 2.5 inches below average for a drafted SG.
nate33 wrote:Nivek, from looking at your YODA data, do you have a sense whether standing reach or wingspan is more influential? And in particular, I'm curious about guards. My intuitive sense is that standing reach is more important for bigs but wingspan may be more important for guards and wings.
closg00 wrote:What were Jeremy Lambs measurements?
sfam wrote:Nivek wrote:Rafael122 wrote:I disagree, he's a two guard. MKG is 6'5.75 in socks, 6'7.5'' in shoes, has a 7 inch wing span and 8'8.5'' reach. So put that in perspective, Beal is three inches shorter and their wingspans are close.
Anthony Davis has a 9 inch standing reach...and he's 7 inches taller than Beal, perspective.
MKG's standing reach is average for a drafted SF. Beal's is 2.5 inches below average for a drafted SG.
Hmm, what are the implications of Beal's shorter size? I'm fairly confident that his rebounding prowess will still carry over in the NBA. I'm not sure this matters unless he fares poorly on the agility drills. If he's a subpar, short athlete, I can see some risk. If he comes out average, or hopefully, slightly better than average, I don't see a real worry here. His hands are at least decent size, and my guess is he still gets off enough shots without worry of being blocked.