zero rings wrote:The data shows quite clearly that Player B is dominant in his role and Player A is mediocre in his.
Taking a bunch of tough shots only matters if you make enough of them to add value. You don’t get partial credit for trying.
The is is my problem with players like Ant. They play the star role and they don’t bring the star impact. KD also takes a lot of tough shots, but we give him credit because the ball actually goes in the basket.
If Ant being a 70 TS% guy is just a matter of role reduction, then he should dial it back and help his team win more games. But of course it’s more about his lack of elite skill. Reducing his role won’t make him the shooter, ball handler, and foul drawer that Reaves is.
Never said Ant was a 70% TS guy, I said he'd be more efficient if his role is reduced. Reducing his role to what Reeves does would make him take better shots at lower volume, which increases efficiency. Similarly if Reeves had to take up the #1 mantle, his efficiency would tumble considerably. Are these points not well-accepted by everyone? I assumed they were at this point
Edwards is more tailored to be a #1, Reaves is tailored to be a complementary piece. The great majority of teams would prefer Edwards because getting a #1 is infinitely harder than getting a complementary piece, even an elite one. That Edwards isn't an elite #1 at 22 years old doesn't make him less valuable than a more polished role player thats 3 years his senior
Yes, you get credit for taking the tough shots when the offense stagnates. Because someone has to. Because they always happen, to even the best teams, and you want to give the ball to your best tough-shot maker. So someone is always going to absorb that and the lower efficiency that brings, which also elevates the efficiency of others because they arent taking those shots