Golabki wrote:bbd24 wrote:Golabki wrote:22 year olds don't have to know everything. But developmentally there is a huge difference. It's not my opinion, it's an empirical fact.
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The problem is the experience. You can't just immediately expect results when you're asking a guy like Olynyk to do everything he didn't do in college. It's an adjustment period. That's why I generally give a rookie three or four years time in the league to adjust to his role in the bigs. It doesn't matter the age, whether their 19 or 24....we wait 3/4 years and then see what they've developed into.
For Olynyk, game after game he's getting better. Still won't have the consistency needed this year, but that ultimately will come in time after he gets more and more comfortable in his role.
3 or 4 years seems generous... Are you really going to with hold judgement untitled he's 27? But I agree - he should get at least 2 years before we call him a bust.
However, I think he's been disappointing and the number of older rookies that become stars is very low, and those that do usually show much more than KO has in his rookie year.
I don't have a problem with people saying he can be good, I have a problem with people comparing to one of the best 10 players since Jordan or saying is floor is to be a borderline Allstar. Both of which have happened in this thread.
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I do it for all rookies, even the older ones that stayed in college. I stick generally with the 3 year rule. I give a college guy 3 years after he's been in the league to judge. The high schooler (back in the day) or 1 year and out college guy gets 4.
Look at the criticism from the past teams. People wanted Perkins gone early. You could even see the board jumping all over Rondo and his shot early on in his tenure. Tony Allen, remember what a piece of garbage he was in year 1 ?
You have to be patient with these prospects. The NBA is a whole new ball game and most have to change their games in order to fit or belong in the league.
I.E. A guy like Olynyk was never asked to shoot beyond 15 ft at Gonzaga. Now he's shooting regularly at 20-24 ft.
Its little things like this that will take adjusting too. He's going to be pretty consistent in 3 or 4 years from out there. Just needs time. He has the skill set you want in a rookie and one that is also unique to the league (Big who can space it out because of his shot).
The other part is the coaching and the fact you can commit 24/7 to basketball. He's going to get coached regularly by pro's who know the game. No knock on Gonzaga or their staff, but the NBA has the best staffs to get the most out of your game. Let him sit and work with the pro staff and see how his game evolves.
The last thing is on the player. How much work does he want to put in ? How better does he want to be ?
A kid like Olynyk is exactly what you want. He seems like he has fun out there and loves the game. He's going to put in the work needed to become better than he is today. So why judge him as a finished product today ? You gotta wait it out.