Kobblehead wrote:I would tend to disagree because I think Sabonis is an example of a guy who relies on his ancillary playmaking trait to mitigate the lack of shotblocking trait. There's a tradeoff there.
With Chet, he has both of those core C traits down. He can rebound and he's an ELITE shotblocker. While also being able to pass and shoot.
The way I see it:
Sabonis: rebound, pass
Kessler: rebound, block
Mobley: rebound, block, pass
Holmgren: rebound, block, pass, shoot
Always take the full package.
Oh.. i thought ur referring to two types of players in general.
If you mean comparison, then i dont see Kessler comparative to Gortat. While my point is Kessler is more like Gobert, someone who’s an elite rim protector. While a more versatile big would be someone like Sabonis, who can do a lot of other things but is average at best at protecting the rim.
In general, my point is value of a player does not depends on how versatile his abilities. Sometimes a player is a specialist but if that trait is highly valued for his position then he may be valuable than a more versatile player.
Another example maybe is JJ Reddick vs MCW. I’d take reddick who is more of a specialist over MCW’s all around game.
Now to the Kessler-Chet comparison. I think Chet can still be better than Kessler. I had Chet #1 on my mock. But it depends on how close Chet’s defense is compared to Kessler and how good Chet’s offense is to make up the difference and even surpass the difference.
There’s never been a time in history when we look back and say that the people who were censoring free speech were the good guys.