nate33 wrote:Why in the world has Brandon Clarke played just 1090 minutes? He's the 5th best player in the league and his idiot coach won't play him? ...
Awwww nate... never did I take you for a mean guy! Poor Brandon Clarke tore his Achilles in early March, but you want to rake him over the coals?

If you recall the '19 draft, I wanted to trade down with Boston -- our 9 for their 20 & 22. Right?
Of course, no one knows whether that would have been possible. But, if the trade had been made, it would have gotten us either Brandon Clarke along with Grant Williams or Clarke plus Keldon Johnson & either Daniel Gafford or Cody Martin or Bol Bol. (I assume I don't need to spin out the details...).
Would that have been a good trade, nate? Cuz that's as far as anything "real" goes.
I.e. the above was definitely what I would have tried to do.
Here's another question: why are you picking a fight with me? Did I call you out for a message board tussle? I don't think so.

nate33 wrote:...Why isn't Walker Kessler on the Mr. Rushmore of greatest rookies of all time? The guy is basically Bill Russell in his first year, yet nobody has heard of him and Utah only played him 1700 minutes. ...
What!!??!! He's not? Wait, let me go look....
I sent out a drone, & the report is that they're carving him now!
More seriously, you don't question whether 1700+ minutes is a lot of minutes for a rookie taken #22 in the draft, do you? Kessler played more than Jalen Duren, Jeremy Sochan, Dyson Daniels, Johnny Davis, Ousmane Dieng, AJ Griffin, Mark Williams, Ochai Ogbaji, Dalen Terry, & Christian Braun -- all of whom were taken before him. In fact, he played more minutes than 7 of the 14 lottery picks.
Per 40 minutes, the kid averaged over 15 rebounds & @4 blocked shots. Didn't do much shooting, but at least they went in: he posted a .702 TS%.
Seems kinda mean-spirited to criticize Walker Kessler just b/c you feel like giving me a hard time!
nate33 wrote:...look at Memphis! They have the greatest front line of all time that would put the 86 Celtics to shame! I mean, Xavier Tillman, Brandon Clarke and Steven Adams! What a trio? Oh wait. You're telling me that 2 of those guys come off the bench? And they also have 2 OTHER All-Stars (Morant and JJJ) but only managed 51 wins?...
To be serious for a minute (it won't last, I promise), it's definitely interesting how hard it is to keep improving. The Grizz won 33 games in '18-19, 1 more game than the Wizards. Then they installed a new FO & proceeded to blow up.
Yes, they were helped hugely by having the #2 pick in the 2019 draft. Yet, how often does that fuel the kind of jumps they made in the next 3 seasons? Not very. Now they seem to have hit a real rough patch. It'll be interesting to see how they manage things going forward.
nate33 wrote:...And I hope Jarred Vanderbilt never gets tired of carrying that scrub Lebron James through the playoffs....
Oh nate... do you have any idea how much money the Vanderbilts have?
nate33 wrote:...just perhaps, you need to re-evaluate the way you look at things and stop being so smug when someone has the temerity to argue that Porzingis is better than Walker Kessler and Nikola Vucevic.
It's always good to re-evaluate the way one looks at things. & -- take me seriously here -- I don't mind when someone points out my flaws; I've got plenty of them (many are a lot more significant than my flaws as a basketball "analyst"!!).
Nor am I too old to learn.* Of course, as the saying goes, "what's good for the goose is good for the gander." I would have no trouble suggesting some areas where you too might "re-evaluate the way you look at things."
As to the 2 guys you mention: Walker Kessler is a rookie. He's not "better" or "worse" than anyone, but he did have a good rookie season. He rebounded extremely well, he posted a .701 TS%, & he blocked 173 shots in 1700 minutes! No reason to take any of that away from him. OTOH, Vucevic has been in the league since 2011. His best years are behind him, for sure, but he's had a good career.
As to the Wizards, here's a serious issue I'd love for you to take on: obviously, a team's record reflects how its players perform on the court. Now, some of that performance, good or bad, may reflect either good or bad ways the coach utilizes the player -- but, still, it's what happens on the court, what the players do, in 82 games that produces the team's record. Given where you rank KP (@24th to 28th best among the 450+ players in the league) & Beal (@ 40th best in the league if I remember rightly; otherwise, please correct me), how should one explain the Wizards 35-47 record?
* Recently, I got interested in why the single-currency "Euro" experiment has failed so badly. So I'm in the middle of this 700+ page book: https://www.amazon.com/EuroTragedy-Drama-Nine-Ashoka-Mody/dp/0199351384/
A couple of years, as it became clear that the enlightenment & its values was under serious attack, I decided to learn more about how it developed in the first place & read https://www.amazon.com/Radical-Enlightenment-Philosophy-Modernity-1650-1750/dp/0199254567/