Lattimer wrote:bebopdeluxe wrote:Lattimer wrote:
And that's where you'll get an argument from people...the "clearly" part. I don't think it's clearly either player. Your shtick is to put a z at the end of Point to argue scoring is less important...Maybe I should start putting a Z at the end of Triple Doublez. I mean we're all seeing how much those Triple Doublez matter with Westbrooks team dominating the league and all...oh wait...
As a sidenote on the Sixers...Maybe it's time to give Embiid a lot more credit than he gets. Without Embiid that Sixers team doesn't even have a winning record let alone make the playoffs. He is huge. You almost forget how big he is until he's next to other bigs.
I think Mitchell and Simmons both have very credible and legit cases for winning rookie of the year. It's not clearly either way, they're both having amazing seasons.
Fair point about Embiid. By the way, what was the Jazz's record the last time Gobert was out?
(it was 4-and-11)
And while you - and other Jazz fans - may tire of POINTZ!!!, at the end of the day, it is the driving force behind what Mitchell brings to the table.
This is your failure. Not seeing how much more Mitchell does and is capable of ON TOP of the fact that he is a great scorer and how critical that is. You ignoring how much Mitchell has on his shoulders as the primary scorer on the team and what that requirement means.
When teams recognized what Mitchell was doing, they started to design their entire defense around stopping him from getting his...he is still scoring and has now passed the 20 ppg mark in his rookie season and the Jazz are a playoff team right now. You not understanding the value of having a guy who does this and simply dismissing him as a volume scorer is why nobody can have a rational discussion about this with you.
Simmons is fantastic at a lot of things but he also has glaring weaknesses (no jumpshot matters, even if you want to think it doesn't...it's like having a quarterback who can't pass in the pocket..sure RGIII got away with it for a bit, but it caught up to him...I'm not saying Simmons isn't great in so many ways he makes up for it, but it's an issue. And the FT thing).
Mitchell is fantastic too, but he has weaknesses he needs to work on. Now that he IS the focal point of the defense, his efficiency consistency is taking a hit and he needs to work on that. But he contributes in other categories all over as well...including Defensively.
I believe Wade is a perfect comparison for Mitchell. If that's what the Jazz have...I'm in heaven. Simmons...many compare him to Magic's game...I can see that. I don't see the LeBron ones totally, because LeBron's shot was quite a bit better. But Simmons is not a finished product and a hard worker so i can see him working on it. Excited to see how things go in the playoffs when pace slows and the half court becomes such a factor.
As far as head to head matchups...I don't care about those at all. Prime example, Deron Williams worked CP3 in most head to heads..we saw how that turned out in the end and how much meaning that has
AARRGGHH!!!
Can't you - or SOMEONE - stop with all of this subjective crap and simply make a STATISTICAL CASE (you know...analytics...advanced stats...you know, FACTS) as to why Mitchell is having a better season than Simmons?
I get it. He is a great scorer (even if his ineffencies negate Simmons' offensive weakness from the perimeter in terms of TS and eFG - oops, sorry...I should know better to reference analytics in this debate). And I am sorry that I do not see what Mitchell "is capable of" other than scoring (statistical/analytical support, please?) or any of the other subjective assertions you make in your post.
This is the essence of my issue with those who say that Mitchell deserves the ROY over Simmons. You can't make the argument within the context of team success, as both teams are doing well (although one could argue that the Sixers winning 20+ more games year-over-year and likely having homecourt would mean something). I could sit here and argue that being a ROOKIE POINT GUARD is a heavier lift then being a wing scorer, but that is the kind of subjective argument that I am trying to avoid here.
My argument is simple. Simmons is the better rookie because - statistically - Simmons is having a superior season...both in terms of head-to-head comparisons as well as relative contribution to team. Period. You can say all of your subjective "well, teams all gear their defenses to stop Mitchell" (as if NO team tries to game-plan around Simmons, LOL), and "you don't see what Mitchell is capable of" (newsflash - statistics and advanced analytics actually SHOW what a player is capable of doing...right?).
I should know by now not to expect a Mitchell supporter to be able to support - with statistics, analytics and FACTS - the position that Mitchell is having a better season than Simmons...because they can't. Numbers and statistics don't lie.
We will see what the voters think.














