JustBuzzin wrote:jc23 wrote:JustBuzzin wrote:She had 10 points last night and for the season 17ppg and 6apg.
All this talk for a average player?
Imagine the circus if her team was actually good and she was a top 5 player. She would be a GOD!
Steph had similar numbers his rookie year to go along with a pair of styrofoam ankles. ish takes time. To be fair your also contributing to the discussion on what you call an average player. Now lets say she never improves or brings the level of excitement we saw from her in college; her popularity will dwindle.
Candace Parker won MVP as a rookie.
Just proves this lady is over hyped. Her college career made her a icon. In reality she's more about marketing more than her actual game.
So I'll jump in just with some context and opinions here:
I think Parker winning MVP as a rookie was crazy for the voters to do, and it speaks to Parker at the time being the most hyped rookie in WNBA history after the first season when the WNBA was being hyped like crazy with Leslie, Swoopes & Lobo being the focus of that hype.
In a nutshell: If 2024 women's basketball people were thinking like 2008 women's basketball people, I think Clark's on the Olympic roster.
I don't want to come across like Parker didn't have a great WNBA career because she did, but I don't think she was ever an MVP level player. Period. This despite the fact that if you list off everything she can do on the court and watch her highlights, she seems like a GOAT candidate.
Now to be clear: I still think Parker had one of the most accomplished rookie seasons in WNBA history, but it has to be understood that the prior season LA Sparks' GOAT Lisa Leslie was out giving birth to a child. So for context, here's the Sparks' record in the run up to Parker's rookie season:
2006: 25-9 (Leslie plays)
2007: 10-24 (no Leslie)
2008: 20-14 (Leslie's back, Parker's a rookie)
The idea then that Parker was the MVP of the league joining a team that was not as good as it had been the last time they were at full strength is just pretty silly to me.
But I still say Parker had a fantastically accomplished rookie season because she played a major part on a winning team. Not Clark's fault for getting drafted on to a terrible team - that's how the draft is supposed to work - but Parker was drafted into a situation conducive to immediate team success and proved she fit, and so has something of a rookie advantage over most other ROYs in my book even if I think she got dramatically overrated as this was happening.
This then to say: While I don't think it's a given that Clark will have a better career than Parker, there's really nothing about Clark's rookie season that says she's clearly below Parker in her capacity to lead elite teams.
Now, on the other hand: I actually think there's a pretty solid case that Maya Moore (Clark's hero), was the MVP of the WNBA as a rookie. I don't think Clark is as good of a rookie as Moore, and I don't think it likely that Clark will be as good a player as Moore became. So there is a gap in my mind between Clark and the absolute best rookie in WNBA history, it's just that when comparing Clark with most of the other hyped rookies in WNBA history (Parker, Taurasi, Griner, etc), I don't really think Clark's disappointing.
(Worth noting that rookie Moore wasn't hyped for accolades beyond ROY. On her team it was the veterans Whalen & Augustus who were named All-WNBA and given serious consideration for MVP. Whalen & Augustus were on the team the previous season when the team went 13-21, and so it seems pretty weird to give them the most credit for the team going to 27-7 and winning the title the next year...but they were the top 2 PPG players on the team as Moore - unlike Parker or Clark - was asked to shift away from her college role as a mega-scorer to become a fill-in-the-gaps player. And so box score-wise, it didn't seem strange for people to assume that the rookie couldn't actually be THE difference from the previous year...but I'd say she was.)