2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5)

Moderators: Clav, Domejandro, ken6199, bisme37, Dirk, KingDavid, cupcakesnake, bwgood77, zimpy27, infinite11285

Which three rookies impress you the most? (vote for up to 3)

Cade Cunningham
90
15%
Jalen Green
5
1%
Evan Mobley
174
29%
Scottie Barnes
111
18%
Josh Giddey
56
9%
Franz Wagner
77
13%
Alperen Sengun
20
3%
Omer Yurtseven
12
2%
Herbert Jones
10
2%
Other (Duarte, Kuminga, Mitchell, Dosunmu, etc.)
49
8%
 
Total votes: 604

bkseven
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,667
And1: 235
Joined: Jun 01, 2012

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#161 » by bkseven » Wed Jan 26, 2022 4:58 pm

yoyoboy wrote:
NYPiston wrote:
MrBigShot wrote:Loving the enthusiasm but Mobley's still in the lead for RoY, there's still a considerable gap in defense and efficiency. Granted, Cade's job is a lot harder running a team bereft of talent. I can see him winning it if he has a really strong post all star break.


That should be taken into account. Mobley is the lead dog right now because of consistency right from the start but he's also in a much better position to succeed right off the bat and he's not tasked to carry a big load on that team like a guard would be.

With that said, I think these two are separating themselves a bit from the pack right now. Cade is getting better and better, needs to cut down on the turnovers though and needs to get into an aggressive mindset more often because when he does, he's really tough to stop.

Detroit was projected to win 24.5 games before the season. Cleveland was projected to win 26.5 games. The idea that the Cavs are in such a great position for Mobley to succeed is one people are only now saying after the fact. Mobley’s impact from the jump is the biggest reason why the Cavs are in such a great position now compared to last year. Garland was here last season. Allen was here. Love was here. Bickerstaff was here. Rubio made a big impact, but the team is still winning games without him. Of course Garland and Allen improved, but Mobley deserves credit for helping put them in positions to do so, just like they deserve credit for helping Mobley. It’s not a coincidence that Allen after four years of middling defensive impact is only now playing like an All-Defensive team guy.

I also don’t know if I agree with the idea that it’s inherently more impressive to be the primary creator on the worst team in the league (2nd worst by record, worst by SRS) than to be the defensive anchor and second leading shot attempter on a top 10 team in the league (4th best by SRS, 9th best by record). Mobley is 3rd on the team in total touches and time of possession this season. So while he’s definitely not carrying the offensive load Cade is, he’s far from an afterthought, and unlike Cade, he’s doing it in wins instead of blowout losses. And I would argue the defensive responsibility Mobley has more than edges the gap that Cade has in terms of offensive responsibility.

Lmao... projections.. You know you can't predict injuries like what happened to Jerami and KO. Also, did those predictions account for the massive jumps by Garland and Allen?
bkseven
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,667
And1: 235
Joined: Jun 01, 2012

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#162 » by bkseven » Wed Jan 26, 2022 5:00 pm

basketballRob wrote:
Read on Twitter
?t=oCGpzCBrs8OSz_QjyrdSow&s=19

Kuminga probably would've been the number 1 overall pick in any normal draft. If he waited until this season, he'd be the clear first pick.

I see wide open threes and layups/dunks..
HiRez
RealGM
Posts: 14,959
And1: 4,088
Joined: Dec 29, 2011

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#163 » by HiRez » Wed Jan 26, 2022 5:12 pm

Rookie tracker through Jan. 25.

Image
Moses ShamMoses
Analyst
Posts: 3,551
And1: 1,463
Joined: Nov 28, 2012
   

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#164 » by Moses ShamMoses » Wed Jan 26, 2022 5:56 pm

Its a toss up who is the best rookie right now between Cade and Mobley. I know we've seen multiple ROTY winners in past years (ex. 1994-95 — Jason Kidd, Grant Hill). This might be a good example of another year where both guys deserve the award.
Jeff Van Gundy on his brother's Pistons: 'He took over the Titanic and it's sinking even quicker'
The-Power
RealGM
Posts: 10,525
And1: 9,945
Joined: Jan 03, 2014
Location: Germany
   

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#165 » by The-Power » Wed Jan 26, 2022 6:10 pm

yoyoboy wrote:Detroit was projected to win 24.5 games before the season. Cleveland was projected to win 26.5 games. The idea that the Cavs are in such a great position for Mobley to succeed is one people are only now saying after the fact.

I'm not sure that really matters with respect to RoY, though. I'm sure you have Allen and Garland as potential All-Stars, and deservedly so. There's nobody even close to that level on the Pistons; and neither has Mobley turned these two players into All-Stars, nor is Cade holding back any Piston from reaching that level. You can also see that the Cavs without Mobley are still playing at a high level, whereas Detroit just sucks no matter who is on the court. So I'm not sure arguments relying on team performance matter much here, but of course it depends on how one personally determines the RotY.

To me, Mobley is having a better season up until this point but I still have Cade as the best prospect in the draft, as I did before they were drafted. Recently, Cade is showing why I was so high on him, and for an on-ball creator in the NBA, the adjustment period he needed (and still needs to some extent) is completely normal. Mobley is who I'd draft 2nd, though, so I definitely like what he has shown. This draft shapes up to be incredible, and more than fulfills my already high pre-draft expectations. There will be ups and downs, of course, but in a couple years I'm confident that we'll look back at this draft and view it as one of the best in a long time.
JonFromVA
RealGM
Posts: 15,170
And1: 5,034
Joined: Dec 08, 2009
     

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#166 » by JonFromVA » Wed Jan 26, 2022 6:26 pm

The Moose wrote:
JonFromVA wrote:
The Moose wrote:
Except that stat isn't indicative of his PPP creating his own shot against a double team, its the average team PPP when Cade is double teamed. So it could be also a sign that the rest of the team is incapable of capitalising when Cade is double teamed. Until players around him start either hitting perimeter shots/moving off ball/being lob threats, it is smart for teams to double team him because the Pistons roster is rather inept


A true PG is a leader who gets his teammates in the best position to score. In my experience, blaming teammates is just an excuse for an inexperienced PG.

Cavs fans don't think it's a coincidence that Darius Garland started improving in his command of a game once he started playing with Rubio.


right, I agree, but thats not what we were talking about. Cade definitely still has a long way to go to be a true PG. He makes some careless mistakes but he's still learning. But the original post was about how Cade was being guarded differently to most rookies and that should be taken into account contextually when looking at his stats compared to other rookies


Teams tend to double ball handlers who don't deal with double teams well, and the PPP number suggest that may be what's going on.

For instance, Kyrie starting winning some games for the Cavs in his rookie year and opponents took notice and decided to see what would happen if they doubled him on his drives. When they discovered he would still just try to throw up a shot, they started tripling him and dared him to beat them with circus shots.
BlazersBroncos
RealGM
Posts: 12,418
And1: 9,975
Joined: Oct 27, 2016

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#167 » by BlazersBroncos » Wed Jan 26, 2022 6:38 pm

Kuminga's explosiveness reminds me alot of Iggy. I think he is something of a love child of a SF version of Jason Richardson and Iggy (Not sure he will ever be as cerebral as Iggy, but who knows).
User avatar
whitehops
General Manager
Posts: 8,350
And1: 7,064
Joined: Dec 12, 2012
Location: Toronto
     

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#168 » by whitehops » Wed Jan 26, 2022 6:59 pm

cade and mobley play each other on sunday (6PM EST) so that'll be a good chance to see the rookies side by side. cade also plays wagner on friday (7PM EST) and herbert jones the game after that.

from sunday-wednesday mobley plays cade, green and herbert jones.

tons of rookie on rookie action coming up soon!
basketballRob
RealGM
Posts: 37,152
And1: 14,923
Joined: May 05, 2014
     

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#169 » by basketballRob » Wed Jan 26, 2022 7:13 pm

whitehops wrote:cade and mobley play each other on sunday (6PM EST) so that'll be a good chance to see the rookies side by side. cade also plays wagner on friday (7PM EST) and herbert jones the game after that.

from sunday-wednesday mobley plays cade, green and herbert jones.

tons of rookie on rookie action coming up soon!
Suggs will probably guard Cade on Friday. Suggs has been the best rookie defensive guard so far.

Read on Twitter
?t=mhHjIES01w0D0N0LvHZvDA&s=19

Sent from my SM-G950U using RealGM Forums mobile app
User avatar
MrBigShot
RealGM
Posts: 18,706
And1: 20,290
Joined: Dec 18, 2010
 

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#170 » by MrBigShot » Wed Jan 26, 2022 8:18 pm

JonFromVA wrote:
The Moose wrote:
JonFromVA wrote:
A true PG is a leader who gets his teammates in the best position to score. In my experience, blaming teammates is just an excuse for an inexperienced PG.

Cavs fans don't think it's a coincidence that Darius Garland started improving in his command of a game once he started playing with Rubio.


right, I agree, but thats not what we were talking about. Cade definitely still has a long way to go to be a true PG. He makes some careless mistakes but he's still learning. But the original post was about how Cade was being guarded differently to most rookies and that should be taken into account contextually when looking at his stats compared to other rookies


Teams tend to double ball handlers who don't deal with double teams well, and the PPP number suggest that may be what's going on.

For instance, Kyrie starting winning some games for the Cavs in his rookie year and opponents took notice and decided to see what would happen if they doubled him on his drives. When they discovered he would still just try to throw up a shot, they started tripling him and dared him to beat them with circus shots.


Eh it's not that deep. The team has very little talent, and Cade is the primary ball handler and playmaker. Therefore it makes sense to game plan to double and trap him. Virtually no rookie deals with double teams well consistently, but you don't seem them all getting doubled.
"They say you miss 100% of the shots you take" - Mike James
JonFromVA
RealGM
Posts: 15,170
And1: 5,034
Joined: Dec 08, 2009
     

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#171 » by JonFromVA » Wed Jan 26, 2022 8:56 pm

MrBigShot wrote:
JonFromVA wrote:
The Moose wrote:
right, I agree, but thats not what we were talking about. Cade definitely still has a long way to go to be a true PG. He makes some careless mistakes but he's still learning. But the original post was about how Cade was being guarded differently to most rookies and that should be taken into account contextually when looking at his stats compared to other rookies


Teams tend to double ball handlers who don't deal with double teams well, and the PPP number suggest that may be what's going on.

For instance, Kyrie starting winning some games for the Cavs in his rookie year and opponents took notice and decided to see what would happen if they doubled him on his drives. When they discovered he would still just try to throw up a shot, they started tripling him and dared him to beat them with circus shots.


Eh it's not that deep. The team has very little talent, and Cade is the primary ball handler and playmaker. Therefore it makes sense to game plan to double and trap him. Virtually no rookie deals with double teams well consistently, but you don't seem them all getting doubled.


Just watched all of Cade's assists, turnovers, and shots .vs. the Nuggets, and again I don't see anything out of the ordinary in terms of double teams. In fact, Bey looks like a nice outlet for him on a double when he bothers to pass it to him.
User avatar
whitehops
General Manager
Posts: 8,350
And1: 7,064
Joined: Dec 12, 2012
Location: Toronto
     

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#172 » by whitehops » Wed Jan 26, 2022 9:25 pm

basketballRob wrote:Suggs will probably guard Cade on Friday. Suggs has been the best rookie defensive guard so far.

omg I'm embarrassed. suggs was injured for so long I'm still not used to him being back.

should be tons of opportunities for cade to guard either wagner or suggs and vice versa. it'll be cool just to see them all on the court at the same time imo.
User avatar
whitehops
General Manager
Posts: 8,350
And1: 7,064
Joined: Dec 12, 2012
Location: Toronto
     

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#173 » by whitehops » Wed Jan 26, 2022 9:26 pm

JonFromVA wrote:Just watched all of Cade's assists, turnovers, and shots .vs. the Nuggets, and again I don't see anything out of the ordinary in terms of double teams. In fact, Bey looks like a nice outlet for him on a double when he bothers to pass it to him.

that's because he passes when he's doubled or trapped lol. those don't make a highlight reel unless it directly leads to an assist. if you watch the full game vs the pistons on Sunday it might give you a better idea.
JonFromVA
RealGM
Posts: 15,170
And1: 5,034
Joined: Dec 08, 2009
     

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#174 » by JonFromVA » Wed Jan 26, 2022 10:14 pm

whitehops wrote:
JonFromVA wrote:Just watched all of Cade's assists, turnovers, and shots .vs. the Nuggets, and again I don't see anything out of the ordinary in terms of double teams. In fact, Bey looks like a nice outlet for him on a double when he bothers to pass it to him.


that's because he passes when he's doubled or trapped lol. those don't make a highlight reel unless it directly leads to an assist. if you watch the full game vs the pistons on Sunday it might give you a better idea.


That's guaranteed, but we're not talking highlight reel here ... nba.com has video for pretty much every play that results in a change in the box score. Literally just click on a number in the box and video will play.
bkseven
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,667
And1: 235
Joined: Jun 01, 2012

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#175 » by bkseven » Wed Jan 26, 2022 10:16 pm

JonFromVA wrote:
MrBigShot wrote:
JonFromVA wrote:
Teams tend to double ball handlers who don't deal with double teams well, and the PPP number suggest that may be what's going on.

For instance, Kyrie starting winning some games for the Cavs in his rookie year and opponents took notice and decided to see what would happen if they doubled him on his drives. When they discovered he would still just try to throw up a shot, they started tripling him and dared him to beat them with circus shots.


Eh it's not that deep. The team has very little talent, and Cade is the primary ball handler and playmaker. Therefore it makes sense to game plan to double and trap him. Virtually no rookie deals with double teams well consistently, but you don't seem them all getting doubled.


Just watched all of Cade's assists, turnovers, and shots .vs. the Nuggets, and again I don't see anything out of the ordinary in terms of double teams. In fact, Bey looks like a nice outlet for him on a double when he bothers to pass it to him.

Lol. So you're judging double teams based on highlights. Try watching some games or the posted double team stats if you're too lazy for that.
JonFromVA
RealGM
Posts: 15,170
And1: 5,034
Joined: Dec 08, 2009
     

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#176 » by JonFromVA » Wed Jan 26, 2022 10:26 pm

bkseven wrote:
JonFromVA wrote:
MrBigShot wrote:
Eh it's not that deep. The team has very little talent, and Cade is the primary ball handler and playmaker. Therefore it makes sense to game plan to double and trap him. Virtually no rookie deals with double teams well consistently, but you don't seem them all getting doubled.


Just watched all of Cade's assists, turnovers, and shots .vs. the Nuggets, and again I don't see anything out of the ordinary in terms of double teams. In fact, Bey looks like a nice outlet for him on a double when he bothers to pass it to him.

Lol. So you're judging double teams based on highlights. Try watching some games or the posted double team stats if you're too lazy for that.


Sorry, are you expecting people to seriously reply to you or report you?
User avatar
yoyoboy
RealGM
Posts: 15,866
And1: 19,077
Joined: Jan 29, 2015
     

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#177 » by yoyoboy » Wed Jan 26, 2022 10:31 pm

The-Power wrote:
yoyoboy wrote:Detroit was projected to win 24.5 games before the season. Cleveland was projected to win 26.5 games. The idea that the Cavs are in such a great position for Mobley to succeed is one people are only now saying after the fact.

I'm not sure that really matters with respect to RoY, though. I'm sure you have Allen and Garland as potential All-Stars, and deservedly so. There's nobody even close to that level on the Pistons; and neither has Mobley turned these two players into All-Stars, nor is Cade holding back any Piston from reaching that level. You can also see that the Cavs without Mobley are still playing at a high level, whereas Detroit just sucks no matter who is on the court. So I'm not sure arguments relying on team performance matter much here, but of course it depends on how one personally determines the RotY.

To me, Mobley is having a better season up until this point but I still have Cade as the best prospect in the draft, as I did before they were drafted. Recently, Cade is showing why I was so high on him, and for an on-ball creator in the NBA, the adjustment period he needed (and still needs to some extent) is completely normal. Mobley is who I'd draft 2nd, though, so I definitely like what he has shown. This draft shapes up to be incredible, and more than fulfills my already high pre-draft expectations. There will be ups and downs, of course, but in a couple years I'm confident that we'll look back at this draft and view it as one of the best in a long time.

Sure, but again, Allen’s improvement this year is partially reflective of Mobley’s impact. He’s been in two different situations and he’s been in the league for four seasons and was largely the same player for all of them, but all of a sudden he’s playing like an All-Defensive Team candidate and a potential All-Star. In the summer, 99% of non-Cavs fans thought the Cavs were insane for giving Allen $20 million a year so that goes to show where public opinion of him as a player was at. Looking at him, I just don’t think it’s so much that he vastly improved his abilities (added strength and better footwork have definitely helped though) and it’s more so he’s in a more optimal role now where Mobley allows him to better play to his strengths and roam more than he has in the past. And I’m not ignoring that having Allen helps Mobley by not having him bang as much, as well, so I think it’s reciprocal.

Garland legitimately improved his abilities, aggressiveness, and decision making. I don’t think his offensive improvement has anything to do with Mobley it I’m being honest. But Darius currently ranks 4th in the entire NBA in RAPM, largely propped up by him ranking 6th in defensive-RAPM. For reference, he ranked 321st last season on a team where Allen was still behind him. His improvement by my eyes hasn’t been crazy substantial and in a vacuum he’s still probably a below average defender. But playing alongside Mobley who covers an insane amount of ground has really allowed DG to funnel guys into the paint, gamble more in the passing lanes, and not get switched into mismatches as often. He smartly plays a limited defensive role and that wouldn’t happen without a defensive phenom like Mobley. In addition to production/measurable on-court impact, I think the presence of a guy on a roster allowing other guys to function in more ideal roles is something that’s overlooked and very important.

I agree that the Cavs’ roster is better and I’m not trying to exclusively look at win total projections as some indication of talent. But I do think it’s useful to some degree because it gives some context of how a team’s talent was viewed under the impression that a guy like a rookie Mobley wouldn’t be contributing to wins year one. In my opinion, without a substantial sample size of minutes where a player actually misses whole games, plus-minus data and metrics derived from it are just really noisy. And it’s easier for a team to manage in a 12-15 minute period where a player is off the court rather than 48 minutes where a guy isn’t even on the bench. If I recall correctly, in 2015, LeBron’s plus-minus numbers weren’t that impressive. Until he went on that like 2 week hiatus where the Cavs looked abysmal without him. Then by the end, he has the best RAPM in the league and one that’s significantly better than he’s had in prior and following years where he had clearly better seasons but didn’t miss as much time. Likewise, I have a feeling that Anthony Davis’ defensive metrics, which the last few years have been very underwhelming, are all of a sudden going to look pretty good by the end of the year now that we’ll have a sizable sample where he missed games and the Lakers clearly couldn’t manage without the defensive load he carried. Finally, I think part of Curry’s MVP case lies in the fact that the Warriors based on their roster weren’t expected to be this good. Someone like Gary Payton II has crazy advanced metrics right now, but when I consider how he played in past seasons and what the expectations were, I now have to attribute a lot of credit to Steph because I think he’s a huge reason why he’s been so successful for the team.

Essentially, I just really push back on the idea that Cade is in an inherently tougher spot to produce compared to Mobley as well as the idea that his load is more. People tend to only consider the offensive side of the ball when thinking about team responsibility. And as far as production, it’s difficult to be a rookie and fit into a team that’s winning right now with the best SRS in the conference, where you’re facing teams every night that are taking you seriously and game planning heavily for you. Teams likely aren’t doing that to the same degree with the Pistons, and Cade is able to have more freedom to try things, make mistakes, and put up a pretty slash line compared to Mobley who’s first and foremost expected to be the anchor of a #3 ranked defense and be the secondary creator in any given lineup, specifically now that Rubio and Sexton are gone.
buzzkilloton
Lead Assistant
Posts: 4,858
And1: 2,442
Joined: Feb 20, 2017
Location: Bangkok
 

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#178 » by buzzkilloton » Wed Jan 26, 2022 10:38 pm

Damn you dont even see the ultra vocal Cade haters that non stopped posted all that time in these threads anymore. Those same guys were also in the Green is the obv #1 category.

Cade is going to end up rookie of the year when its all said and done imo.
bkseven
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,667
And1: 235
Joined: Jun 01, 2012

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#179 » by bkseven » Wed Jan 26, 2022 10:46 pm

JonFromVA wrote:
bkseven wrote:
JonFromVA wrote:
Just watched all of Cade's assists, turnovers, and shots .vs. the Nuggets, and again I don't see anything out of the ordinary in terms of double teams. In fact, Bey looks like a nice outlet for him on a double when he bothers to pass it to him.

Lol. So you're judging double teams based on highlights. Try watching some games or the posted double team stats if you're too lazy for that.


Sorry, are you expecting people to seriously reply to you or report you?

Report.. oh no so scared.. Just commenting how laughable you're judging double teams based off a game's highlights :lol:
bkseven
Sixth Man
Posts: 1,667
And1: 235
Joined: Jun 01, 2012

Re: 2021-22 NBA Rookie Thread (part 5) 

Post#180 » by bkseven » Wed Jan 26, 2022 10:50 pm

yoyoboy wrote:
The-Power wrote:
yoyoboy wrote:Detroit was projected to win 24.5 games before the season. Cleveland was projected to win 26.5 games. The idea that the Cavs are in such a great position for Mobley to succeed is one people are only now saying after the fact.

I'm not sure that really matters with respect to RoY, though. I'm sure you have Allen and Garland as potential All-Stars, and deservedly so. There's nobody even close to that level on the Pistons; and neither has Mobley turned these two players into All-Stars, nor is Cade holding back any Piston from reaching that level. You can also see that the Cavs without Mobley are still playing at a high level, whereas Detroit just sucks no matter who is on the court. So I'm not sure arguments relying on team performance matter much here, but of course it depends on how one personally determines the RotY.

To me, Mobley is having a better season up until this point but I still have Cade as the best prospect in the draft, as I did before they were drafted. Recently, Cade is showing why I was so high on him, and for an on-ball creator in the NBA, the adjustment period he needed (and still needs to some extent) is completely normal. Mobley is who I'd draft 2nd, though, so I definitely like what he has shown. This draft shapes up to be incredible, and more than fulfills my already high pre-draft expectations. There will be ups and downs, of course, but in a couple years I'm confident that we'll look back at this draft and view it as one of the best in a long time.

Sure, but again, Allen’s improvement this year is partially reflective of Mobley’s impact. He’s been in two different situations and he’s been in the league for four seasons and was largely the same player for all of them, but all of a sudden he’s playing like an All-Defensive Team candidate and a potential All-Star. In the summer, 99% of non-Cavs fans thought the Cavs were insane for giving Allen $20 million a year so that goes to show where public opinion of him as a player was at. Looking at him, I just don’t think it’s so much that he vastly improved his abilities (added strength and better footwork have definitely helped though) and it’s more so he’s in a more optimal role now where Mobley allows him to better play to his strengths and roam more than he has in the past. And I’m not ignoring that having Allen helps Mobley by not having him bang as much, as well, so I think it’s reciprocal.

Garland legitimately improved his abilities, aggressiveness, and decision making. I don’t think his offensive improvement has anything to do with Mobley it I’m being honest. But Darius currently ranks 4th in the entire NBA in RAPM, largely propped up by him ranking 6th in defensive-RAPM. For reference, he ranked 321st last season on a team where Allen was still behind him. His improvement by my eyes hasn’t been crazy substantial and in a vacuum he’s still probably a below average defender. But playing alongside Mobley who covers an insane amount of ground has really allowed DG to funnel guys into the paint, gamble more in the passing lanes, and not get switched into mismatches as often. He smartly plays a limited defensive role and that wouldn’t happen without a defensive phenom like Mobley. In addition to production/measurable on-court impact, I think the presence of a guy on a roster allowing other guys to function in more ideal roles is something that’s overlooked and very important.

I agree that the Cavs’ roster is better and I’m not trying to exclusively look at win total projections as some indication of talent. But I do think it’s useful to some degree because it gives some context of how a team’s talent was viewed under the impression that a guy like a rookie Mobley wouldn’t be contributing to wins year one. In my opinion, without a substantial sample size of minutes where a player actually misses whole games, plus-minus data and metrics derived from it are just really noisy. And it’s easier for a team to manage in a 12-15 minute period where a player is off the court rather than 48 minutes where a guy isn’t even on the bench. If I recall correctly, in 2015, LeBron’s plus-minus numbers weren’t that impressive. Until he went on that like 2 week hiatus where the Cavs looked abysmal without him. Then by the end, he has the best RAPM in the league and one that’s significantly better than he’s had in prior and following years where he had clearly better seasons but didn’t miss as much time. Likewise, I have a feeling that Anthony Davis’ defensive metrics, which the last few years have been very underwhelming, are all of a sudden going to look pretty good by the end of the year now that we’ll have a sizable sample where he missed games and the Lakers clearly couldn’t manage without the defensive load he carried. Finally, I think part of Curry’s MVP case lies in the fact that the Warriors based on their roster weren’t expected to be this good. Someone like Gary Payton II has crazy advanced metrics right now, but when I consider how he played in past seasons and what the expectations were, I now have to attribute a lot of credit to Steph because I think he’s a huge reason why he’s been so successful for the team.

Essentially, I just really push back on the idea that Cade is in an inherently tougher spot to produce compared to Mobley as well as the idea that his load is more.
People tend to only consider the offensive side of the ball when thinking about team responsibility. And as far as production, it’s difficult to be a rookie and fit into a team that’s winning right now with the best SRS in the conference, where you’re facing teams every night that are taking you seriously and game planning heavily for you. Teams likely aren’t doing that to the same degree with the Pistons, and Cade is able to have more freedom to try things, make mistakes, and put up a pretty slash line compared to Mobley who’s first and foremost expected to be the anchor of a #3 ranked defense and be the secondary creator in any given lineup, specifically now that Rubio and Sexton are gone.


Only glanced over some points and wanted to bold the contradiction above.

Also.. just FYI Jarrett Allen was already a very good player... Why the hell else would the Cavs give him 5 years $100M.

As of now:
Garland >>>> Hayes
Jarrett Allen >>>> Stewart
Kevin Love >>> 12 games of KO
Okoro << Bey
Markkaenn >> Hamidou (yes our PF at times)
Injured Rubio = Injured Grant

Return to The General Board