WargamesX wrote:bronxknicksfan1 wrote:WargamesX wrote:
I think you’re remembering his time a bit too fondly
Randle might take off plays but with Melo it was he opposite where there were clips of him playing good team defense because it was notable when he actually tried.
Melo was not known for being good at deferring and all those PG’s had to actively look him off because if they passed him the ball and the defense then loaded up on him, Melo wasn’t passing it back. The AI years was the epitome of I shoot or I pass to AI and he shoots, which was why the nuggets moved AI for Billups, and in hindsight putting AI on a team with Melo was a mistake because he learned that hero ball was all that was needed to win.
Am I remembering it too fondly or are you giving Randle too much credit?
Both are sieves defensively. Both show/ed a lack of effort on that end.
How many times have we seen Randle hold the ball for an entire possession and throw an out of control pass in the air towards the end of the shot clock? How many times have we’ve seen meltdown towards the end of the games? In the playoffs? Melo’s offensive impact was more on the star-superstar level. Randle is closer to average-above average. Again, you replace Randle with Melo on this current squad, they’d be in contender status. Melo had his faults, but in his prime, he’s led teams with much less talent than this current Knicks team to the playoffs. Don’t think Randle could’ve done the same.
Randle did the same the first year he was here. RJ and Quick were not nearly as good as they are now, and just showed parts of their game, and Mitch was foul prone. On the low the second best player on that 2020’s team was probably Alec Burks. That 2020 team mostly won games because of Randle. Also there is a key point you’re over looking Melo wasn’t trying to pass the ball even as the clock wound down. Even in his bad possession Randle at least considers passing. Melo is taking that shot with 5 guys guarding him.
RJ averaged 17 a game that year. Rose was a 6MOTY candidate. IQ and Burks contributed to a strong bench. Mitch and Noel was a dominant defensive tandem. They were 3rd in DRTG that year. Randle’s offense was a big part of the success that year, but they were carried mostly by their defense keeping them in games. Only roster even comparable to this one with Melo was the 2012-13 team.
And somehow, even with Melo taking shots like that, his offensive impact was higher than Randle’s. This is also backed by advanced stats as well. Not to mention, the offensive talent around Randle the past couple years laps anything that was put around Melo. Take a look at those rosters again.