shrink wrote:https://www.basketball-reference.com/players/t/townska01.htmlIf you scroll to the bottom of this page, you’ll find a player’s appearance on “Leaderboards, Awards and Honors.” As you can imagine, Towns is listed in many separate years for many things. But one interesting thing bbref does is compare your average production to current players, and all players that have ever played in the NBA. Keep in mind that Towns hasn’t gotten old enough to hurt his averages with eventual decline, and he started as a rookie as a very good NBA player. Still, even factoring in last season, his placement among his peers is startling.
Points Per Game: 11th among Active Players, 29th among Career NBA
Rebounds Per Game: 3rd, 25th
Blocks Per Game: 13th, 92nd
FG Percentage: 19th, 60th
3-PT FG%: xx, 66th
2 PT FG%: 14th, 25th
EFF FG%: 12th, 19th
TS%: 6th, 9th
Minutes Per Game, 15th, xx
PER: 6th, 14th
WS/48: 12th, 33rd
BPM: 12th, 29th
OBPM: 10th, 17th
ORtg: 8th, 13th
Usage%: xx, 46th
Total RB%: 9th, 24th
ORB%, 13th, xx
DRB%, 9th, 13th
Block%: 11th, 59th
Does Towns get treated like he is on lists with the best players today, and forever? As an example, he’s 14th all time in PER
1. Michael Jordan* 27.91
2. Nikola Jokić 27.65
3. LeBron James 27.22
4. Anthony Davis 26.96
5. Shaquille O'Neal* 26.43
6. David Robinson* 26.18
7. Wilt Chamberlain* 26.16
8. Bob Pettit* 25.45
9. Kevin Durant 25.29
10. Giannis Antetokounmpo 24.92
11. Neil Johnston* 24.86
12. Charles Barkley* 24.63
13. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar* 24.58
14. Karl-Anthony Towns 24.42
15. James Harden 24.35
16. Chris Paul 24.34
17. Tim Duncan* 24.22
18. Magic Johnson* 24.11
19. Karl Malone* 23.90
20. Stephen Curry 23.84
21. Hakeem Olajuwon* 23.59
22. Julius Erving* 23.58
23. Larry Bird* 23.50
24. Dwyane Wade 23.48
25. Kawhi Leonard 23.42
I think it's just a matter of people getting used to things, no matter how exceptional they are, until it's no longer good enough. It's basically the same principle of corporations in the US at play (exponential growth at all costs, anything less = failure).
Even exceptional output becomes normal at some point with many people. They continue to shift their expectations further until it hits a breaking point. All of the ideas being thrown around in KAT trade scenarios have been ridiculous AND incredibly reactionary (mostly to the Gobert trade which is even more mind numbing).
All of the trade KAT requests are focused on selling him off based on an emotional reaction to this season. None of it is based on making the team better, when people don't get what they want (this year the level of success they expected based on the Gobert trade) they react based on that disappointment, rather than what would logically be the best move.
Which is why you see so many people wanting to trade KAT for pennies on the dollar while he is in his prime on a longterm contract. After last season the majority of the fan base was focused on getting KAT to sign on longterm, but now that he was hurt most of this year, they are acting out of fear (What if he is declining? What if he continues to have health issues? He won't let Ant be the alpha! He makes too much money! etc)
The main issue with the team this season is that their best player was hurt for most of the season, but the solution to that is getting KAT healthy (bring back Arnie Kander*!) not turning him into role players and picks.
If you sprain your ankle you let it heal and build strength up (and maybe take precautions in the future to avoid re-injuring it) you don't cut it off and replace it with a peg, because you think it's holding you back.
*Damn, just looked it up and Orlando hired Kander. Great pick up on their part.