homecourtloss wrote:
That ‘87-‘93 stretch is interesting. By the end (1992 and 1993), Wilkins was a very clear heavy defensive liability and was never likely ever even a neutral defender. He had a solid OBPM, but was underwhelming efficiency wise on their best teams and was somewhat efficient in ‘90-‘92 and quite efficient in 1993.
The Hawks’ best offenses in this stretch took place in years in which Wilkins was not all that efficient and of course wasn’t a playmaker. One thing, however, was that Wilkins was very careful with the ball and either got shots up or got fouled. It’s still somewhat awful thst he has such a relatively poor rTS% given his high FTr. And these Hawks teams were great offensive rebounders and Nique was part of this though Willis, Livingston, Moses, etc., were the ORB engines. Their offense also fell off sharply the year Doc Rivers was gone.
Yeah, shooting will help you avoid turnovers, and turnovers do play into ORTG and so forth, as does offensive rebounding. He was... not good at making shots that weren't transition dunks. Leastwise relative to other elite scorers, anyhow. Very underwhelming in terms of 2FG% in that regard. You keep saying he had a "high" FTr, but he didn't. He recorded a single season of .400+ FTr, and was a .345 career guy, .357 in the 87-93 stretch. That is not particularly high. Not bad, but not especially remarkable. Jordan was a .411 guy from his rookie year through 91. Magic was at .489 on his career. Dantley was at .552. World B Free was at .438. Sidney Moncrief at .527. B King was at .396 from 79-87 and hit .400+ 5 times in that stretch. Orlando Woolridge was at .428. Reggie Miller was a career .402 FTr guy. KJ was a .512 guy. Wilkins was wholly unremarkable in this regard, had more in common with Drexler and Alex English and dudes like that. Not high at all, relative to other wing scorers, and that doesn't even account for big men. And yes, he needed a good PG, kind of like Melo.
Draw rate definitely mattered for the Hawks, but that wasn't Nique's doing. 89 is a good example. THey were 2nd in the league in FTr with Nique at .298, which is garbage. That was driven primarily by Moses, with better draw rates from Doc, Reggie Theus, Cliff Levingston, John Battle and Jon Koncak (though obviously volume plays with most of those guys).
But if we're speaking of offensive rebounding, we've now stepped away from discussing Nique as a scorer. He could have shot far less and the impact from his low turnovers and his offensive rebounding would still be there, and the team might be better off (depending on personnel, naturally) on a theoretical team. His shooting volume was more relevant to the Hawks, but it often causes misconceptions about his value, which came somewhat less from his scoring than it did from other areas.