cupcakesnake wrote:aminiaturebuddha wrote:cupcakesnake wrote:
This feels too common with a lot of Canada's top prospects. Wiggins and RJ were both the best 16, 17 year olds in the world... and then completely stopped developing.
To be fair, it's not just Canadian prospects, it just happens a lot with athletic wing players that are physically ahead of their peers at a younger age. See: Shabazz Muhammad, Felipe Lopez, Lenny Cooke, and even other guys who made it to the NBA but then stalled like Michael Kidd-Gilcrist or Josh Jackson.
Very true. Stanley Johnson is another recent example. I'm always a sucker for this type of player.
RJ was a bit of a surprise though because as a kid his game seemed very cerebral and his feel looked advanced. I still remember his 38 points in the defeat of the States in a U19 tournament. I thought of him as a Harden type, a guy who could use his power game to unlock passing reads. He seemed like the opposite of Wiggins at the time.
RJ and Wiggins are an interesting comparison, because although they're both that same category of player (hyped young prospect that dominated in high school ranks), they seem to have hit the wall for different reasons.
With Wiggins, he has always been a tremendous athlete, but his feel for the game and overall motor has held him back (at least until he became the player he is now with Golden State, but by that time he had lost those key development years of learning how to be a real lead star).
With RJ, I think his feel for the game is still actually pretty good. He's a decent passer, and knows when to make smart cuts if he's playing with guys who will get him the ball, he tries on defence. But his lack of top-end athleticism seems to be holding him back. He's not the quick twitch athlete that Wiggins is. Everything with him lacks fluidity and seems kind of plodding. Even his shot mechanics don't have that quick easy flick of the wrist that good shooters have. His main athletic advantage is his strength for his size. That's useful, but limits his upside, IMO.