Ron Swanson wrote:skones wrote:Ron Swanson wrote:Well, no. Jokic absolutely has holes to his offensive game. He doesn't apply consistent rim pressure due to athletic and speed/quickness limitations, doesn't generate a ton of foul pressure or FT opportunities without flopping/grifting, and he's a low-volume, streaky 3PT shooter (he ain't Dirk). He's probably one of the 5 or 6 best passers and about as automatic of a mid-range and around the basket big-man as I've ever seen, but saying he's essentially this perfect basketball player with some fluctuating defensive deficiencies is big hyperbole and a bridge too far for my liking.
He's 3rd in the league when it comes to FTA at the 5 for starters. With that being said, I guess I don't consider things that come as a direct result of a physical limitation as a "hole" to someone's game, but that's just me. From a skillset standpoint, the guy is just the complete package at the 5. Inside, outside, "streaky" but hits at 39%, GOAT level passing, the movement, the awareness, it's all there.
And I didn't say he was a "perfect basketball" player either, immediately following it with defensive deficiencies given I was speaking to his offensive repertoire is one hell of a straw man.
I mean, ok? That's not really how that works though. I would view anything that mitigates your effectiveness in certain situations (transition offense, ability to collapse a defense, off-ball pick & roll effectiveness, lob threat gravity) as a deficiency to one's offensive game, but I don't really feel the need to get into a "what is talent/skill" debate so we'll just agree to disagree.
You've made a couple of really nice posts here. I'd also add that if we were specifically comparing him to Giannis, in terms of rim pressure he doesn't have the same power or body control. And maybe from a motivational perspective, he doesn't seem to try and dominate games like Giannis. Which can be both a blessing and a curse both ways.
This is very much a 'Megan Fox has ugly thumbs' debate though. The beauty of these two guys is their uniqueness and imperfections.