realball wrote:That's the problem with these hypotheticals... what if he has another bad game and his averages drop further? Are you just going to say that he's still adjusting? How much of a sample size is enough? Are we only okay to evaluate him after the season is over? You were ready to anoint Achiuwa as our starting C after half a season, so clearly half a season can't be enough. It's a huge red flag that you have cut down a 12-game sample size even further to make your point.
I am not ignoring that his floater has disappeared, I am just not assuming that it will most definitely return. I specifically said that we would be paying a premium for his age, so obviously I am not ignoring the age difference between him and Schroeder. You are building up strawmen to knock down.
For me, the biggest reason he has been a huge disappointment is not that he shooting poorly, but that he has not been able to get separation on shots. He's not been able to drive past his man and get into the paint on his own. I wasn't expecting him to be efficient, but I was expecting him to step in and be aggressive as scorer, like we've seen from RJ. He's clearly not that guy from what we've seen so far. And if he's not breaking out this year, then asking a fifth year player to breakout after signing a big contract is a tall ask.
How much do you think Schroeder is worth? He was one the best backups in the league last year as well, and he got $12 mill a year. Quickley was also one of the best backups.. was he worth twice as much?
We're obviously going to be paying a premium for perceived potential, but we don't need to act like that potential has been achieved.
Compared to Schroder, Quickley has a better 3 point shot, is more of a scorer, has better D, is younger, is worse at getting to the rim, but has potential to improve near the paint if he solidifies his floater game. On top of that, he's relatively inexperienced taking on a lead PG role.
Career-wise Quickley's underperforming based on advanced stats due to his increased role (Ortg/Drtg of 118/119 and BPM of -0.1 with Toronto). Schroder is overperforming compared to his numbers in recent years (Ortg/Drtg of 120/121 and BPM of -1.5 with Toronto).
As is, Quickley can be a #4 or 5 guy on a contending team in today's league and would likely look much better in that role compared to being a #2-3 guy. A 23-25 M/year contract certainly isn't unpalatable. Comparable contracts include Derozan (28), Tobias Harris (39), Tyler Herro (27), Rozier (23), Bruce Brown (22), Aaron Gordon (22), Wiggins (24), Draymond Green (22), Jrue Holiday (37), Brook Lopez (25), Middleton (29), Norman Powell (18), Michael Porter (33), Deandre Ayton (32), Jordan Poole (28), Kyle Kuzma (25), Jordan Clarkson (23), GTJr (18)
We're not getting a steal with a 20-25 M/year contract, but it seems like fair value to me.