pingpongrac wrote:UnbelievablyRAW wrote:Los_29 wrote:
That's what the offseason is for. He's too good to be in the G-League and was far better off in the NBA. He won the ROTY last year.
He is a guy that averaged 10ppg in college. You need to move him along slowly. The team has managed him well so far. Start simple and then slowly expand his game.
Also, I don't think the team is as concerned with making him a lead guy. If he's the lead guy it will come naturally, it won't be because we forced him to become one. The cream always rises to the top.
This is all in hindsight lol. This whole comment chain started with I wish he got that opportunity because its too late to do that now. I'm in the camp that game experience is better than off season training alone. Someone like Lauri looked to have comeback from International play a new player having to carry that team.
I look at the offseason as a time to fix ball handling and shooting efficiency and to work on the body, but being able to get stuff off in live play will always be different than practice drills with a coach.
Scottie himself seems to aspire to be "the guy" from some of his goals hes commented on, its just about finding a pathway to get him there. Its also not uncommon for guys to never get a chance to show their expanded games because of team role going back to Lauri. If Scottie is still the number 3-4 guy on offense next year, I doubt he gets to showcase much of his improvements unless Nick forces it.
Even if you train something in the offseason, if you rarely do it in games you're not going to be confident in what youre trying to do when you do pull it out. Its the reason all these centres (and Ben Simmons) that post their off season drills and shots don't impress me. If when real games happen and you're scared or never put yourself in opportunities to use those skills, it won't mean anything
Scottie had that opportunity last season against high-level competition though. He was 3rd in PPG, 3rd in total points and 3rd in FGA among rookies while he also finished with the 2nd most isolation attempts. The numbers among his draft class are similar this season too (5th in PPG, 4th in total points and 4th in FGA while he's 2nd in ISO attempts) and he has had a bit of an increase in his role overall (+0.7 FGA per36, +1.2 USG%, +2.5 front court touches, +0.8 time of possession, etc.). If you dig into his playtype allocation, he's getting more opportunities as "the guy" this season as well as he has a higher frequency of isolation, post-up and PnR ball handler possession. The issue is he has been less efficient in those playtypes (-0.05 PPP in isolation, -0.06 PPP in post-ups and -0.39 PPP in PnR ball handler) as well as his bread and butter last season (-0.13 PPP in transition and -0.28 PPP in putbacks) while his pull-up shooting is also down (-0.12 PPP) which has torpedoed his efficiency. These are all things that Scottie needs to get better at for him to get to the next level, but they are things he needs to work on against NBA-level players. Working on his craft in the G-League would be meaningless at this point because he wouldn't be improving by beating up on bad players/teams.
Comparing Scottie to a player like Markkanen doesn't make sense because their style of play is so wildly different. Scottie has twice as many ISO possessions (1.9 vs 1.1) and PnR ball handler possessions (1.6 vs 0.8) as Markkanen while Markkanen has twice as many spot-up + off-screen possessions (7.3 vs 3.5) and 0 dribble FGA (10.4 vs 5.4). Markkanen has always been a good jump shooter on high-volume which gives him a leg up when it comes to scoring on increased usage. To put it into perspective, he has played ~150 less minutes than Scottie this season yet he has almost made as many threes (170) as Scottie has attempted (183).
Markonnen wasn't brought up to compare their playstyle, only to lend to the point that a getting reps being the main guy is beneficial to development if thats the goal. I'm pretty sure if he still was buried on the Chicago lineup or behind Garland and Mobley he wouldn't be the same guy he is in Utah even if they gifted him 5 more shots a game.
Scottie has an uptick in isos but his role is inconsistent, partly due to lineup changes because of injury. One day he is a centre screening and moving the ball, the next he's the "point guard" and asked to play completely differently. Having role definition and consistent opportunity to develop within it is important for overall development.
Also again, my first comment was in hindsight about last year. Idk where I said I want him in the g-league right now, this was about the beginning of his rookie year and getting an opportunity to try to play point guard full time for a while to get comfortable with it. He put up great numbers last year but he never played one consistent role and was used everywhere. I even said I hope for the rest of the year Nurse allows Scottie to play more with the bench as the sole starter so he can get reps leading an offense as the main scorer and distributor and work through his inefficiencies

























