JackTalkThai wrote:Godymas wrote:JackTalkThai wrote:
Through the first 85 games of his career, LeBron James (ever hear of him?) had a .490 TS%. Take a wild guess why a player like LeBron who had a similar helio-centric playing style to Cunningham and was also playing on a bad team like Cade would struggle early on in his career with TS%.
Take your time. I’ll hang up and listen.
Actually LeBron averaged 49% TS for his rookie season which was 79 games.
In his 2nd year in the first 5 games his TS immediately jumped to 56% and he averaged 55% for the whole season
His 85 game career TS% did not jump from .488 to .560 over just a 5 game stretch. If you want to add additional context, factor in the first 6 games of his 2nd season and present to the class LBJ’s exact initial 85 game TS%.
The reality you will find from all of that effort is that it was still below Cade’s current TS% and the complete essence & entirety of the point that was made still stands. Which is exactly why you tried to obfuscate the point with empty fodder.
? what kind of convoluted logic is this
Cade Cunningham in the first 9 games of his second season is shooting 51% TS, that's where the 51% came from.
Cade Cunningham played 76 total games in his first 2 seasons. LeBron had a 79 game rookie year.
Obviously his 85 game TS is not going to jump up to 56% because it's weighed down by his rookie year, but it is pointless to try and include his numbers from the previous year into this calculation, but rather you judge the player the way they played at the moment.
LeBron improved at his 80th NBA game to start averaging 56% TS, this is an objective fact. Of course if you want to add his entire rookie year into the equation it will weigh it down, but you didn't add Cade's worse TS from his first 2 years into his calculation.
That's right, the 51% TS is the MOST positive and CAREER HIGH he's ever posted.