E-Balla wrote:How not he's a young big that scored amazingly well. Plenty of great players were bad offensively as rookies because they could only score off their raw talent and they couldn't yet do it in a way that helped the team.
Oh yeah, I"m not looking at him and going "meh, TS%" or anything like that. I'm looking at his size, his approach to the game, his skill set, the odds of him being a worthy focal player based on the last 3.5 decades of NBA basketball, etc, etc.
That's not true.
It's definitively true. It doesn't mean he can't develop it, but he blew chunks past ten feet. He shot 27.4% from 16-23 feet and 35.3% from 10-15 feet, both of which are quite bad.
To compare him to other rookie bigs Demarcus was about 36% on the same amount of attempts
Yeah but Cousins shot 39.5% from 16-23 feet, and he did it on over half of that volume. He shot 32.8% from 10-15 feet, which sucked, and hasn't evidenced any development there since, just seasonal variance. Cousins also took basically a half decade to even begin to be a worthwhile offensive piece, struggling alternately with finishing rate at the basket and his jumper before finally at least figuring out how to draw a lot of fouls and improving at the line. He's also more worthwhile because of the stuff that he does that has nothing to do with offense, and has always been a noticeably superior passer than Okafor.
I think all of these guys outside of KAT and Porzingis are in the prove it stage though. Jokic barely got PT, Turner was bad but good for a rookie, and Embiid is coming off a 2 year hiatus and is only 3 games in. Jahlil is somehow getting less hype than all other young Cs despite having the 4th most impressive resume of the bunch.
I don't really disagree here. I was reacting there specifically to "big of the future."
Anyway, as I've said in a couple of other posts ITT, Okafor needs a decent PG and some time to show us what he's got, for sure. Philly probably isn't the place for him if teams want to try to run him as a 5, so we'll see. I would bet against him being a franchise player, but I'd be more intrigued at trying to see how he will compare to Utah Carlos Boozer. A little more punch in terms of creating his own offense, a little less on the glass, still a net positive player with a strong PG kind of thing.