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Rui Hachimura 2.0

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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#541 » by nate33 » Mon May 2, 2022 4:02 pm

GoneShammGone wrote:
nate33 wrote:...

Kleber is one of the best defensive PF's in the game. He helps Dallas way more on defense than he does with his shooting. Kleber is the guy I'm hoping and praying Rui can become, but unfortunately, Rui has not demonstrated any of Kleber's defensive awareness and effort.


I'm with you on the fact that Rui needs to get better on defense. Its disappointing that he regressed this year. But on the other hand, Rui doesn't need to be as outstanding at defense as Maxi Kleber to be a really useful player. If he can get to the point where he is solid on-ball and gives reasonable effort, I think he can stay on the court in the playoffs.... where his efficiency is a real weapon.

Anyway, I'm curious... how do you value him compared to Kuz? I posted mostly because I was seeing a trend of people suggesting Rui as a tradable piece instead of Kuzma. What's your take?

I think Kuzma is currently a better player than Rui because of his rebounding and general offensive awareness. All you need to do to "fix" Kuzma is tell him to take fewer difficult shots and hopefully hone his 3-ball a bit more. Basically, you are just asking him NOT to do things and to pick a subset of his existing talents and specialize on them, which is easier than learning how to do extra things. I don't think Kuzma will ever be an above-average starter, but he could be a 4th or 5th starter, or a really good 6th man.

In Rui's defense, he is almost 3 years younger and has played 40% as many minutes. It is understandable that he isn't as good as Kuzma. I think that if Rui can commit to playing defense like he did during the 2nd half of last year, while also hitting 3's like he did this year, he could be a serviceable starter, but that's the near term limit IMO. I just don't see his issues with basketball awareness and ball-watching going away anytime soon. At best, he gets himself to "serviceable starter" and then slowly, ever so slowly, improves his basketball awareness issues over time with on-the-court experience. But I think he will always be frustrating. He will always have that Jeff Green like ability to disappear at times, so that you don't even notice him on the court for long stretches.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#542 » by payitforward » Mon May 2, 2022 7:49 pm

This comparison of Rui & Kuzma seems kind of abstract to me. They are not similar players in any significant way. Above all, they are at very different points in their careers & they earn very different $$$.

If you go back to the two guys' rookie years, Rui was a better rookie than Kuz. But, Rui was a high pick & Kuzma was not -- for which reason, the fact that he earned 2400 minutes & wasn't a disaster made Kyle Kuzma look good. Both guys got worse not better their second seasons, but Kuzma got worse again in his year three, whereas Rui improved this year.

It remains to be seen whether Rui can do next year what Kuz did in his year 4: improve significantly overall. One would like to think that his radically improved 3-point shooting is a sign of that possibility. But, of course, until it happens....

Overall, for the Wizards at least, the most important fact is that neither of them is actually good. Kuz is better, but "better" isn't the same as "good."

Since Kuzma is older & makes more $$, to me at least it seems clear that it is a far higher priority to trade him than Rui. In fact, I'd call it quite a high priority. If he can bring us a younger player &/or picks that would be great. That's what we need pure & simple!

As to trading Rui, to me that's situational: if the right deal came along, sure. But... there's a "right deal" for every player no matter whom, so that's not saying much. I doubt we could get enough for Rui that Tommy &/or Ted would be interested. & some unquestionably good deals (e.g. Rui straight up to SA for Tre Jones) would make us look foolish & therefore won't happen.

In short, we definitely should trade Kuzma, & it seems like we probably can. OTOH, it seems like we probably can't trade Rui advantageously, so we should simply hope for the maximum development from him next year.

As to what Rui's ceiling is, or Kuzma's, I think nate is pretty accurate -- maybe a little optimistic about both guys to tell the truth! Guys who are actually "good" in any objective sense, are usually there by the time they turn 24. Neither of these guys fit that mold.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#543 » by FAH1223 » Mon Jul 18, 2022 5:25 am

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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#544 » by payitforward » Fri Jul 22, 2022 12:15 am

Should go here...
doclinkin wrote:
gambitx777 wrote:
Dat2U wrote:
He's a terrible rebounder, passer & defender. His awareness is still very poor. He hasn't proven to be a guy that will help you win games. I'm not extending that guy at all. I'm hoping a team buys the scoring chops so the Wiz can recoup a little value in a trade.
What stats do you have that show he's a bad defender because he isn't. He's not a terrific rebound no. But he can score.



Stats that show Rui is a bad defender:

On/Off data. With Rui on court, opposing teams are better at shooting, rebounding, and assists. The team is 3pts worse per 100 possessions with Rui in the game.

Line-ups.. Scroll down to 2 man line-ups. Rui next to any other player equals a negative point total.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#545 » by DCZards » Fri Jul 22, 2022 12:48 am

Rui is a good man defender but a bad team defender.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#546 » by doclinkin » Mon Sep 12, 2022 4:28 pm

Curious about the mindstate of Hachimura going into this year. We start the pre-season games at the end of the month with an opener in Japan, against the Warriors. As often with Rui his emotional and mental state are his largest question marks. He missed the Asian world cup qualifier games that Japan played this offseason, and the internet has been pretty silent on why, or on what else he has been doing this summer. (Though admittedly my Japanese is limited to manga titles and internet slang). I didn't find footage of him at the Big Guard camp as in past offseasons, etc. No word on him working out with big name trainers, or scrimmaging against NBA competition. We get first peek where his game is immediately upon the start of our preseason, opening against the world champions. I'm curious to see how this works out.

Rui has often been an enigma. His past coaches discussed his difficulty due to language and culture differences. He is seen as a hard working good character guy, but he has not added to his team game much. His country freights him with outsized hopes, even while he experiences a high level of anomie due to incipient racism in the culture. He's an insider's outsider. Teammates and coaches seem to like him, but you get the sense he is isolated. He took months away from the team and the game, and says in order to regain his love of the game he watched highlights of his own play. He seemed to miss spending time with the team, and even then he slowly reintegrated with the team, not even practicing with teammates for a few months despite rejoining the team.

The interesting thing about his stats are that, contrary to the usual pattern, Rui's 3FG% has been steadily improving yet his FT% is in a steady slide. From 82% as a rookie, to 77% his 2nd year to 69% this past year. To my way of thinking tree throws tend to suggest focus, desire, attitude, mental fortitude. Players who improve in this category from year to year are often those whose game generally improves over time in other BBIQ categories (reduction in fouls, TOs, improvement in 3FG%, better team defense) and often these are players whose stats are not volatile over the course of a season, or the course of a game (maintaining the same average in late game situations as they have in the 1st quarter).

This is a contract year for Rui. I wonder what that additional pressure might do to either encourage the best play from him, or even maybe stunt his game further. As always I everyone waits on his breakout year. He has had one of the more unusual starts to a career (freak testicle injury, COVID year, high pressure international games, HOFer Westbrook riding him hard by all accounts --with his unique brand of high pressure high usage non-traditional PG play. Then Rui suffered early burnout, and a coaching change).

In that respect one could imagine the usual young player breakout has been stalled. And with Rui we already give him a pass that some areas of the team game may currently elude him since he was late to the game in life. (Hadn't really known much about the game until high school and learned it by watching videos of Carmelo Anthony in FIBA play). One could imagine that Rui may still eventually have a real breakthrough even if, or perhaps because, everyone has written him off. Once the pressure is off (if it ever is, due to international hopes) maybe he has the distance to understand the nuances of the team game and slowly put it together based on coaching and experience.

A few hopeful signs exist though that point to a possible uptick in production or efficiency. The team has had a full offseason to work with him, uninterrupted by worldwide pandemics or international obligations. We don't see video of him in scrimmages, but who knows what work he has put in on skills training under team guidance. This team put up an iron wall around his personal struggles and really worked with him to shade him from outside pressure. they worked with him one-on-one a great deal during that time. One expects that built a fair amount of trust in the coaching staff and front office. And an understanding of what he does well.

Too, our coach is noted as a savvy player-development guru who builds his offensive systems to take advantage of what his players do well. Rui is an above average shotmaker at most positions on the floor (except the long 2 when he is run off the 3pt line on the left elbow). His lower TS% reflects the types of shots he chooses, but he makes those shots at an above average rate compared to other NBA players. They are just bad shots to take. The improvement in his outside shooting though is startling though. Beginning in play-in competition, his 3FG% was one bright spot in our getting smoked by Philly a couple years ago. It carried over to Olympic play (38% on 7 shots a game as the focal point of all defenses) and continued in the NBA when he rejoined the team. A coach can use that skill, rely on it. A big who can shoot from outside and finish on the interior adds useful skills. You have to figure Wes and the stat gurus have identified systems and sets that maximize the things that each of the players do well. Rui's 40% 3FG looks good on a spread sheet. Wes gets an offseason to implement his system with players who have experience in it.

A key factor: personnel looks like a a better fit. We added PGs in the offseason who are not undersized 2-guards (Neto) or high usage combo guards (Westbrook, Dinwiddie, or relying on Beal as sole PG). Two of the players added already have experience in the offense and defensive systems Wes has helped input in the past. They. seem to be a match with what Rui needs: players who know what they are doing and can make him look good next to them.

Rui has played most efficiently in his career next to the combo of a floor stretching shooter + a playmaker. Last year his only positive point total line-ups were sharing the floor with Kispert + any of Satoransky/Avdija/Ish Smith. (Rui 2022 Line-ups, sort 3-man combos by pts or eFG%.) Too, if you look at 4-man combos, the team put up positive numbers with similar lines plus a floor stretching Big in Porzingis). Rui with space to operate and smart decision-makers looks like a better version of himself.

This year we added outside shooting + 3 playmakers (Morris 7ast/100pos, Wright 7ast/100pos, Barton 6ast/100pos) and Deni apparently has upgraded as a creative ballmover on offense. Rui may find himself with easier looks and get the ball in places where he can do something good with it.

Anyway. A lot of words, but, just that there are signs in place that suggest Rui may see an uptick in value. Either value to the team in production, or in what he might recoup in a midseason trade. (Or, of course, at the end of the season in his contract negotiations. Which is naturally a risk when Ted is involved).

I think we could see a breakout year for Rui. Though I don't expect we see a hot start, especially given the fact that we open the pre-season in a high pressure way, facing off against the best team in the World.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#547 » by doclinkin » Mon Sep 12, 2022 5:42 pm

Ok here's footage from August I didn't see:

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Rui doing Rui things, scoring with ease, playing no defense.

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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#548 » by nate33 » Mon Sep 12, 2022 6:50 pm

It doesn't look like anyone is playing defense. Rui just strolls into the lane for a dunk every time he gets the ball.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#549 » by nate33 » Mon Sep 12, 2022 6:59 pm

It's hard not to get excited about Rui every time we see him in the offseason. He really LOOKS the part of an elite NBA player. He has an impressive physique and excellent balance and coordination. He is as strong as the stronger 4's in the league, and as quick as many 3's. His shooting form looks picture perfect now that he has added arc to his shot.

He just has no nose for the ball on defense, and very little playmaking skills on offense.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#550 » by doclinkin » Mon Sep 12, 2022 7:59 pm

nate33 wrote:It doesn't look like anyone is playing defense. Rui just strolls into the lane for a dunk every time he gets the ball.


True. The tall guy with the afro plays a little bit and makes an effort to rebound, especially on offense since that is what is highlighted here, but Rui's particular brand of defense is notably lazy. Hands by his pockets, half hearted swipes in the general direction of the ball but usually after the guy has blown by him, no lateral movement no shifting to cut off lanes for penetration, and most of the time just not in the area even when it was his man who scored. Other players at least have a hand up when their man has the ball. With Rui's wingspan and giant hands he would make it difficult for anyone if he just remembered to raise a stick hand to defend the jumper and keep a wide base, active feet. He does not seem to think defense is part of the game, it does not occur to him.

Big Guard skills are nice, I just always wish with Rui that he had a Big Man camp instead of a finesse skills camp. He can do the face-up thing, has no idea how to rebound or defend in the paint. With a little comfort in those skills he could dominate. Even in backing players down he resorts to a spin back fadeaway instead of hooking around them to slam the ball or whatever. He physically could do many things that nobody else can do, he simply does not seem to understand his own potential in this regard.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#551 » by payitforward » Mon Sep 12, 2022 9:18 pm

The single best predictor -- by far! -- of what a 4th year player will do in the league is what that same player did in his 3d year.

That's just fact. It's not conclusive of course -- not by any means! Not for Rui or any other guy. But, it's still the best guide we have. & it definitely points to the most likely result.

Last year, Rui improved enormously as a 3-point shooter. That gives us a basis to think he'll be an extremely good 3-point shooter this year as well.

But, his 2-pt % went down slightly, his FT % went down, & he got to the line less. You can hope all that improves, but there's nothing to make you think they will. Nor did he improve in any other way. &, as doc has shown, his defensive effect is negative: teams score more points against us when Rui is on the floor than when he is off the floor.

In short, although we can hope for Rui to take a jump this year -- & I'm sure we all do hope he will -- there is no basis whatever, none at all, to predict that he will.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#552 » by doclinkin » Mon Sep 12, 2022 11:38 pm

payitforward wrote:In short, although we can hope for Rui to take a jump this year -- & I'm sure we all do hope he will -- there is no basis whatever, none at all, to predict that he will.


Which is what you generally say with regard to individual stats in a team game. With absolute authority: "I degree none shall improve except by their prior stats, and those who state otherwise shall be tortured unto death by endless recitations of Draft day tradedowns!"

However I suggested one basis for potential improvement: the team around him improving in key ways: an uptick in potential assists, and an added depth of shooting. Feel free to refute those factors if you want. But saying 'no basis, none whatesoever, nah nah nah I'm not listening' is really no argument at all.

What I am suggesting here is that even without much in the way of individual improvement, Rui's numbers may look better by team factors around him. That is: our stat god Dr Dean Oliver said of the 4 factors that win basketball, the most important is shooting efficiency (worth 40% of the total). An increase in overall assists tends to correlate with improved efficiency. It should be evident why: an assist measures a FGA that ends in 100% effectiveness, more so when including 3pt attempts and And-1 opportunities.

Rui in particular benefits more than many players by addition of better passers around him. Feel free to look at his line-up data yourself, but year over year it is demonstrably true that when he plays in lines with better passers, his efficiency improves. I showed last year's data, which carries with it its own regressions based on 5 person line-ups down to Rui +1. Rui shoots better when he is on court with a long ranged shooter or a passer. His numbers look best next to one of each. So the question is whether we have in fact upgraded in these categories.

We lose 416 minutes of Tomas Satoransky (and his 5 assists a game) and 615 minutes of Ish Smith (also 5ast/g). Both had about a 5:1 asst/TO ratio with the Wiz. Remarkably good, albeit in limited minutes.

We also lose 2329 minutes of KCP about half of which were at SF, and half at 2G (1.9 ast/1.3TO). We lose 1370 mins of Raul Neto and his 3.1 ast/game (to 1.1 TOs) in a PG role.

We replace those high minute players with with x-minutes each of Monte Morris (last year playing 2239 minutes, with per 36 of 5.4 asts against 1.3 TOs) and Delon Wright (1452 minutes last year, with a per36 with 4.7a/1.1TO). And Will Barton (2277 minutes, 4.4 ast/2.0 TO per 36).

Question. Is it possible Rui's numbers would look better next to a whole season of Satoransky, instead of Raul Neto? Because the year before that he played next to a guy who averaged a triple double, and Neto was relegated to an undersized offball shooter instead of playing primarily at PG.

But yeah it could be likely that Hachimura simply became a worse shooter. And not the fact that the prior year he had 270 shots in the paint vs 120 points in 21-22. Or that next to Westbrook 89% of his shots at the rim were assisted, whereas this past year only 61% of his shots at the rimwere assisted. But I'm sure you're absolutely right, that stats generally show that players get worse at shooting, and there is probably no explanation for it except that he's probably just worse. So there is no basis whatsoever to even bother pointing all of that out.

You might be right, I'm the one who noted that his FT shooting has declined. (Though, there you know, nobody is feeding him assists at the free throw line). Seems to me however that basketball is a Team game, and you cannot reduce everything a player does to their individual box score stats.

I would say though one might be careful speaking in absolutes, or else one might absolutely look like an absolute nincompoop :clown:
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#553 » by DCZards » Mon Sep 12, 2022 11:52 pm

payitforward wrote:The single best predictor -- by far! -- of what a 4th year player will do in the league is what that same player did in his 3d year.

That's just fact. It's not conclusive of course -- not by any means! Not for Rui or any other guy. But, it's still the best guide we have. & it definitely points to the most likely result.

Rui obviously had a very challenging and atypical 3rd year...had some undisclosed issues that prevented him from doing pretty much anything bball related the first half of the season and it probably took him 10 or so games to get into game shape after that. So I'm not going to put too much stock into what he did last season...the good, the bad or the ugly.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#554 » by payitforward » Tue Sep 13, 2022 12:37 am

doclinkin wrote:
payitforward wrote:In short, although we can hope for Rui to take a jump this year -- & I'm sure we all do hope he will -- there is no basis whatever, none at all, to predict that he will.


Which is what you generally say with regard to individual stats in a team game. With absolute authority: "I degree none shall improve except by their prior stats, and those who state otherwise shall be tortured unto death by endless recitations of Draft day tradedowns!"...

Oh doc, you're such a silly boy! As you know perfectly well, I said nothing of the kind -- in fact I wasn't talking about Rui in particular but rather about the difference between hoping for something & predicting it.

doclinkin wrote:...I suggested one basis for potential improvement: the team around him improving in key ways: an uptick in potential assists....

For sure, if his teammates shoot better, & given that sometimes they'd be shooting off of a pass from Rui, his assists would increase.

doclinkin wrote:...Feel free to refute those factors if you want. ...

No not at all. Not trying to refute -- or even responding to, really -- what you wrote. Just thinking about Rui's performance: what can be hoped for vs what can be expected.

doclinkin wrote:...What I am suggesting here is that even without much in the way of individual improvement, Rui's numbers may look better by team factors around him. ...year over year it is demonstrably true that when he plays in lines with better passers, his efficiency improves. I showed last year's data, which carries with it its own regressions based on 5 person line-ups down to Rui +1. Rui shoots better when he is on court with a long ranged shooter or a passer. His numbers look best next to one of each. So the question is whether we have in fact upgraded in these categories....

Actually, that's kind of an interesting point -- we'll get a chance to see whether the team overall improves in these ways & what the effect is (or at least what the result is) for Rui.

doclinkin wrote:...Question. Is it possible Rui's numbers would look better next to a whole season of Satoransky, instead of Raul Neto? Because the year before that he played next to a guy who averaged a triple double, and Neto was relegated to an undersized offball shooter instead of playing primarily at PG....

Rui's year 3 numbers were remarkably consistent w/ his year 2 numbers with 2 exceptions -- 3 pt. shooting & FTs. He took more 3pas & catapulted his % upwards, while he got to the line less & his % there dropped. His 2-pt % was virtually identical.

doclinkin wrote:...But yeah it could be likely that Hachimura simply became a worse shooter....

??
Far from it! He became a far better shooter overall last year! His TS% went up nicely -- & on increased usage as well. Another jump like that this year would mean a lot

doclinkin wrote:...the prior year he had 270 shots in the paint vs 120 points in 21-22....

Since his 2-point % was essentially unchanged from the prior year to '21-22, that's a positive not a negative -- although the overall figure is obviously a bit misleading, since Rui played almost twice as many minutes the previous year (& took 70% more shots overall -- meaning that, in effect, it was 159 instead of 120 -- still a big difference).

doclinkin wrote:...But I'm sure you're absolutely right, that stats generally show that players get worse at shooting, and there is probably no explanation for it except that he's probably just worse. So there is no basis whatsoever to even bother pointing all of that out....

I don't know what motivated this annoying tone, but why don't you save your sarcasm for occasions when you actually read something carefully enough that you understand what's being said. Rui was a far better shooter his 3d year. Not worse. As I & everyone else have pointed out -- & as jumps out of the numbers.

doclinkin wrote:...basketball is a Team game, and you cannot reduce everything a player does to their individual box score stats....

No sh#t, Sherlock. Only I didn't "reduce" anything (let alone "everything") to box score numbers or anything else.

What I did do was talk about what one might or might not "expect" (or even "predict") from Rui vs. what one might "hope for" from him, a useful distinction in pretty much every aspect of life, basketball not excluded.

doclinkin wrote:...I would say though one might be careful speaking in absolutes, or else one might absolutely look like an absolute nincompoop :clown:

& I would say you might think about having a mirror installed in your house; if so, you could look in it & see the nincompoop who wrote your post.

Love you, doc, you know that -- but maybe you should choose a whipping boy who can't run circles around you easily in just about every possible endeavor of thought, logic, writing, & even mathematics. You know, the way I can....

Enough's enough, young whippersnapper.

Today's my birthday, btw -- I turned a couple hundred centuries old. Wish me a happy one.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#555 » by doclinkin » Tue Sep 13, 2022 12:43 am

payitforward wrote:Love you, doc, you know that -- but maybe you should choose a whipping boy who can't run circles around you easily in just about every possible endeavor of thought, logic, writing, & even mathematics. You know, the way I can....



Ha! Lets take this to the poetry thread. We can have a proper scottish flyting. And let the masses decide. If we have any masses.

But yes happy day my friend. Hope you've had a good one.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#556 » by nate33 » Tue Sep 13, 2022 1:08 am

doclinkin wrote:Rui in particular benefits more than many players by addition of better passers around him. Feel free to look at his line-up data yourself, but year over year it is demonstrably true that when he plays in lines with better passers, his efficiency improves. I showed last year's data, which carries with it its own regressions based on 5 person line-ups down to Rui +1. Rui shoots better when he is on court with a long ranged shooter or a passer. His numbers look best next to one of each. So the question is whether we have in fact upgraded in these categories.

It might work the other way too. It's possible that, if put in the right system, Rui can make other players look better. As you said earlier, Rui is an above-average shooter at nearly every spot on the floor. His problem is that he takes the more difficult shots. But maybe that really isn't such a problem when put in context. If Rui is taking shots from the more difficult spots on the floor, he is allowing space for other players to get shots in the high percentage areas.

(Of course, Rui's consistently negative on/off differential belies this argument. He hasn't helped his teammates in the past. But maybe Wes Jr. has some tricks up his sleeve.)
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#557 » by nate33 » Tue Sep 13, 2022 1:16 am

I would like to point out that Rui did show a fair bit of improvement last year. His scoring jumped from 20.2 to 24.9 points per 100 possessions while his TS% improved from .549 (.027 below league average) to .579 (.013 above league average). Meanwhile, his rebounds, assists, steals and blocks all improved slightly, while his turnovers held steady at a pretty low 1.7/100. So he improved at everything, including a pretty substantial jump in scoring, while also improving efficiency.

The only caveat is that he came off the bench and was therefore doing this against second string defenders.
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#558 » by Dat2U » Tue Sep 13, 2022 1:27 am

I'm in the trade Rui camp. He can be a designated scoring option off the bench but nuisances of the game still escape him and his inability to see the floor on either side of the ball makes it tough to imagine a scenario where he's not hurting the team in someway. And its not like there's a high motor to compensate defensively or on the boards.

But the 3pt shooting, mid-range shot creation & ideal physique/quickness for a forward could pique another team's interest.

You want to make the team better? What pieces could you procure from Utah using Kuz/Barton & Hachimura?
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#559 » by payitforward » Tue Sep 13, 2022 2:20 am

doclinkin wrote:
payitforward wrote:Love you, doc, you know that -- but maybe you should choose a whipping boy who can't run circles around you easily in just about every possible endeavor of thought, logic, writing, & even mathematics. You know, the way I can....

Ha! Lets take this to the poetry thread. We can have a proper scottish flyting. And let the masses decide. If we have any masses....

Oh sure you bet, or as my Viennese Mother used to say: "mehr fehlt mir nichts."

But feel free to post something there if you like.

& if you PM me your address, I'll send you a couple of the about 20 books I've published, point you to a few of the many anthologies that contain work of mine (including one of the Norton Anthologies), give you the names of some of what must be 100 magazines that have published my work (I lost count long ago), link you to translations of my writing into several languages, & even pass you URLs of a few readings I've given that were uploaded to youtube or vimeo, & so forth.

doclinkin wrote:But yes happy day my friend. Hope you've had a good one.

My wife & I got back a week ago Sunday from 3 weeks in France. We spent about a week in the Perigord, visiting prehistoric caves & the Lascaux museum. Extraordinary! Unfortunately we both caught Covid while in the amazing little town, Les Eyzies -- check it out: https://archaeology-travel.com/france/les-eyzies-the-world-capital-of-prehistory/

We've been fighting it for 2 1/2 weeks -- just starting to come out the other end. It's a pain in the axe, let me tell you (you may know from your own experience, for that matter).
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Re: Rui Hachimura 2.0 

Post#560 » by payitforward » Tue Sep 13, 2022 2:57 am

nate33 wrote:I would like to point out that Rui did show a fair bit of improvement last year. His scoring jumped from 20.2 to 24.9 points per 100 possessions while his TS% improved from .549 (.027 below league average) to .579 (.013 above league average). Meanwhile, his rebounds, assists, steals and blocks all improved slightly, while his turnovers held steady at a pretty low 1.7/100. So he improved at everything, including a pretty substantial jump in scoring, while also improving efficiency.

The only caveat is that he came off the bench and was therefore doing this against second string defenders.

The jump in his TS% is the most significant of those improvements -- & it was driven 100% by his 3 pt. shooting (as was the increase in points per 100 possessions).

TS% averages differ by position. Rui's was slightly above average for a 4 -- .579 vs. .573. Thus, .006 above average.

He was also a bit better than average in turnovers -- .5 fewer than average per 40 minutes. For that matter he also committed 1 fewer foul than average for a PF in 40 minutes.

But, that's where the good stuff ends -- defensive boards, offensive boards, blocks, steals, & assists were all well below average.

Particularly troubling, maybe, is that defensive boards, offensive boards & assists were down, meaningfully down, from his rookie year.

In fact, if Rui had combined this year's improved scoring with rebounding & assists numbers at the level of his rookie year, he'd have established himself at the productivity level of an average NBA PF. In his 3d year. That would have been good.

But... he didn't. Let's hope he does this year, as I'll be surprised if Ted doesn't want to keep him for his marketing value.

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