amcoolio wrote:Certainly they are moving on from Richards and trying to find a backup big who can shoot, if they want to play a lot of 5 out
Mo Bamba on a cheap deal? Can run the floor and protect the rim as well as Nick.
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amcoolio wrote:Certainly they are moving on from Richards and trying to find a backup big who can shoot, if they want to play a lot of 5 out

EmpireFalls wrote:amcoolio wrote:Certainly they are moving on from Richards and trying to find a backup big who can shoot, if they want to play a lot of 5 out
Jalen Smith isn’t a bad bet. He’s not really a true 5 but I like his shot a lot.

wilson115 wrote:Crash's best years had his usage rate hovering in the low 20s, which would make him the third best player on most teams today.
Out of eight teams in this year's conference semis, the only ones to have more than two of their highest minute guys (at least 300) get better than 20% usage rates were the Pacers (5), Wolves (3), and Thunder (3). What they all had in common were bigs who let them play 4/5 out (Turner/Toppin, KAT/Naz Reid, and Holmgren).
A healthy Porzingis would've given the Celtics a third high-usage guy, but even the stud guards Holiday and White didn't get to 20% with Tatum and Brown dominating the ball. So, going by this year's playoffs at least, the best bet at a high-usage type able to share the floor with other high-usage types is a big who hits threes at a respectable volume.
Doesn't mean a team absolutely needs more than two high-usage guys to win seeing Boston and the Mavs (with PJ #3 in minutes and usage [16.8%] over the playoffs) both made it all the way to the finals relying on a mere two high-volume shot creators each.
MasterIchiro wrote:wilson115 wrote:Crash's best years had his usage rate hovering in the low 20s, which would make him the third best player on most teams today.
Out of eight teams in this year's conference semis, the only ones to have more than two of their highest minute guys (at least 300) get better than 20% usage rates were the Pacers (5), Wolves (3), and Thunder (3). What they all had in common were bigs who let them play 4/5 out (Turner/Toppin, KAT/Naz Reid, and Holmgren).
A healthy Porzingis would've given the Celtics a third high-usage guy, but even the stud guards Holiday and White didn't get to 20% with Tatum and Brown dominating the ball. So, going by this year's playoffs at least, the best bet at a high-usage type able to share the floor with other high-usage types is a big who hits threes at a respectable volume.
Doesn't mean a team absolutely needs more than two high-usage guys to win seeing Boston and the Mavs (with PJ #3 in minutes and usage [16.8%] over the playoffs) both made it all the way to the finals relying on a mere two high-volume shot creators each.
Oh, how comforting, Crash was drafted at age 19 and only needed 9 seasons to make an AS team. He shot 32% for his career on 3's. A decade can pass in the blink of an eye!
wilson115 wrote:MasterIchiro wrote:wilson115 wrote:Crash's best years had his usage rate hovering in the low 20s, which would make him the third best player on most teams today.
Out of eight teams in this year's conference semis, the only ones to have more than two of their highest minute guys (at least 300) get better than 20% usage rates were the Pacers (5), Wolves (3), and Thunder (3). What they all had in common were bigs who let them play 4/5 out (Turner/Toppin, KAT/Naz Reid, and Holmgren).
A healthy Porzingis would've given the Celtics a third high-usage guy, but even the stud guards Holiday and White didn't get to 20% with Tatum and Brown dominating the ball. So, going by this year's playoffs at least, the best bet at a high-usage type able to share the floor with other high-usage types is a big who hits threes at a respectable volume.
Doesn't mean a team absolutely needs more than two high-usage guys to win seeing Boston and the Mavs (with PJ #3 in minutes and usage [16.8%] over the playoffs) both made it all the way to the finals relying on a mere two high-volume shot creators each.
Oh, how comforting, Crash was drafted at age 19 and only needed 9 seasons to make an AS team. He shot 32% for his career on 3's. A decade can pass in the blink of an eye!
Crash's best year he hit 37.1% of his 1.8 3P attempts per game. In college he hit a blistering 17.5% of the same number of tries per game. Different league back then, we can make the argument Tidjane's already a better shooter given his volume.
Toppin has gotten up to hitting 35.6% of his 3.3 3P heaves per his first playoffs with Indy after averaging less than 32% on threes his two years with the Knicks. I doubt it takes Tidjane nine years to hit that accuracy given the coach and roster around him.

SWedd523 wrote:This is the most viscerally negative response I can remember to a hornets pick.
Which is funny because I bet this board did a collective hour or less of research into this kid.
MasterIchiro wrote:wilson115 wrote:MasterIchiro wrote:
Oh, how comforting, Crash was drafted at age 19 and only needed 9 seasons to make an AS team. He shot 32% for his career on 3's. A decade can pass in the blink of an eye!
Crash's best year he hit 37.1% of his 1.8 3P attempts per game. In college he hit a blistering 17.5% of the same number of tries per game. Different league back then, we can make the argument Tidjane's already a better shooter given his volume.
Toppin has gotten up to hitting 35.6% of his 3.3 3P heaves per his first playoffs with Indy after averaging less than 32% on threes his two years with the Knicks. I doubt it takes Tidjane nine years to hit that accuracy given the coach and roster around him.
Great, so relative to the new era of pace and space, pick 6 has to clear an even higher bar for outside shooting than Crash, who seemed to get by without high volume accuracy, given am era when the league rewarded physicality to a greater extent.
Trying to stay hopeful here. Fingers crossed.

bravor wrote:No matter how much he trains, Crash was a lockdown defender, something that Salaun will never become (and by never i mean never).
Wallace had good driving skills, he had a good ft rate in his career, again, i have trouble thinking it could be the same for Salaun.
The hustle and activity, sure, and i would add the competitiveness, that's something they share. But on the court, even with a great development, it's hard to find anything in common. If you could merge both, you would have a pretty nice tweener otoh (crash motor and agressivity to the rim and in defense, and Salaun's shooting and good positioning basically)
Anyway as of now, i see him as a spot on shooter, sort of a wing Teletovic (or as i once said, sort of a Ryan anderson guy with better defence)

amcoolio wrote:I think a huge, better defending PJ is a good goal for Salaun, because that player can easily play the 5 for any team. He's got a ways to go though for on ball defense. He's already as good or better than PJ at switching/closeouts