Duffman100 wrote:I'd like to see the "miles run" metric on this kid too. I think he's dealing with a bit of fatigue from the constant motion and being the focus of the defense.
2.68.
1.141 offensive, 1.27 defensive.
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Duffman100 wrote:I'd like to see the "miles run" metric on this kid too. I think he's dealing with a bit of fatigue from the constant motion and being the focus of the defense.

tsherkin wrote:Duffman100 wrote:I'd like to see the "miles run" metric on this kid too. I think he's dealing with a bit of fatigue from the constant motion and being the focus of the defense.
2.68.
1.141 offensive, 1.27 defensive.

Duffman100 wrote:tsherkin wrote:Duffman100 wrote:I'd like to see the "miles run" metric on this kid too. I think he's dealing with a bit of fatigue from the constant motion and being the focus of the defense.
2.68.
1.141 offensive, 1.27 defensive.
Is it above average or am I exaggerating and my eye test is off

tsherkin wrote:Duffman100 wrote:tsherkin wrote:
2.68.
1.141 offensive, 1.27 defensive.
Is it above average or am I exaggerating and my eye test is off
He's 16th in the league, and on the lowest MPG of the bunch. That said, there are some notable differences in games played among some of those guys and NBA.com does an ass job of labeling certain things, so I don't know if it's per-game or total.
But yeah, it's worthy of note.

Duffman100 wrote:tsherkin wrote:Duffman100 wrote:
Is it above average or am I exaggerating and my eye test is off
He's 16th in the league, and on the lowest MPG of the bunch. That said, there are some notable differences in games played among some of those guys and NBA.com does an ass job of labeling certain things, so I don't know if it's per-game or total.
But yeah, it's worthy of note.
16th in the league for a 20 year old not use to this type of usage.
tsherkin wrote:Duffman100 wrote:tsherkin wrote:
He's 16th in the league, and on the lowest MPG of the bunch. That said, there are some notable differences in games played among some of those guys and NBA.com does an ass job of labeling certain things, so I don't know if it's per-game or total.
But yeah, it's worthy of note.
16th in the league for a 20 year old not use to this type of usage.
Yup. He moves.
It's early days, but I find him more compelling in some ways than Scottie. Whether that's correct or not is a question for the future, of course, but Gradey's an interesting one. Something to be excited about this season, anyhow.


Scase wrote:A touch of recency bias possibly, but he's definitely been showing flashes of some serious skill that was unknown before. His ceiling is looking way higher than originally thought.
Scase wrote:tsherkin wrote:Duffman100 wrote:
16th in the league for a 20 year old not use to this type of usage.
Yup. He moves.
It's early days, but I find him more compelling in some ways than Scottie. Whether that's correct or not is a question for the future, of course, but Gradey's an interesting one. Something to be excited about this season, anyhow.
A touch of recency bias possibly, but he's definitely been showing flashes of some serious skill that was unknown before. His ceiling is looking way higher than originally thought.

HumbleRen wrote:Scase wrote:tsherkin wrote:
Yup. He moves.
It's early days, but I find him more compelling in some ways than Scottie. Whether that's correct or not is a question for the future, of course, but Gradey's an interesting one. Something to be excited about this season, anyhow.
A touch of recency bias possibly, but he's definitely been showing flashes of some serious skill that was unknown before. His ceiling is looking way higher than originally thought.
It's an aesthetic bias. Everyone loves seeing great shooters zip around, punching through gaps, screens, etc etc to get off a clean silky shot.
It's why Stephen Curry and Caitlin Clark are so popular. They're just simply more enjoyable to watch than like say Giannis or Anthony Davis of the worlds.
Duffman100 wrote:HumbleRen wrote:Scase wrote:A touch of recency bias possibly, but he's definitely been showing flashes of some serious skill that was unknown before. His ceiling is looking way higher than originally thought.
It's an aesthetic bias. Everyone loves seeing great shooters zip around, punching through gaps, screens, etc etc to get off a clean silky shot.
It's why Stephen Curry and Caitlin Clark are so popular. They're just simply more enjoyable to watch than like say Giannis or Anthony Davis of the worlds.
Might also be that we've been generally starved, as a fanbase, of this type of player.
tsherkin wrote:Scase wrote:A touch of recency bias possibly, but he's definitely been showing flashes of some serious skill that was unknown before. His ceiling is looking way higher than originally thought.
Oh, it's absolutely part recency bias. It's also offensive bias, because Gradey is immediately a more effective scorer than Scottie. And it's easier to see than, for example, the large difference in Scottie's defense versus Gradey's. And then there's subjective bias in enjoying how Gradey plays the game more than watching Scottie waddle his way through his moves.
What Barnes brings to us when he's healthy, even though he isn't a particularly good scorer, is still both very important and considerably more versatile than Gradey at the moment. But that doesn't mean my lizard-brain doesn't like watching Gradey more xD



Vampirate wrote:Barnes as a scorer is much better than being credit for.
He lacks a first step, fast twitchiness and has a shaky handle, however he can also just overwhelm defenses with his strength and wingspan and actually has range.
tsherkin wrote:Vampirate wrote:Barnes as a scorer is much better than being credit for.
Based on what? Nothing statistical. Little qualitative support for it either. The 4 games he's played this season don't count to me, they don't factor into my evaluation. Last year, even with his 3 falling, he was still below league-average efficiency.
He isn't horrible, I'll give you that. He isn't as bad as he looked to start this season, that's also clear. But he isn't especially good, and that's at fairly unremarkable volume.He lacks a first step, fast twitchiness and has a shaky handle, however he can also just overwhelm defenses with his strength and wingspan and actually has range.
He has strength, he has wingspan. He finishes well when he gets inside, and gets there a reasonable amount. His short game is pretty decent. He's okay at drawing fouls. He's shaky beyond 10 feet, he isn't especially remarkable at the line (just average)... And yeah, his range is suspect at best. We saw 2 months of 3pt shooting from him, that's about it. And yeah, he lacks elite speed/acceleration and he doesn't have an especially strong handle.
So I don't think there's a lot going on there to support the idea that his scoring is "much better than being credit[ed] for," personally. He has potential, but he lacks tools at the moment.
If you want to project off of December, then I guess I can kind of see where you're coming from, but I doubt he is magically a 40% 3pt shooter on 6.7 3PA/g over a whole season, so I'm not really with it.


Vampirate wrote:
The bold is where it's misleading.
From 10-16 feet he's shot under 30%, but weirdly from 16ft-3P he shot closer to 40% in his career.
This season from 10-16 feet he's shooting .375, from 16ft-3P he's shooting .167
His FTR took a jump from .266 last year to .365.
Pre Siakam as a #2 he was a 39% 3P shooter pretty much, post trade those numbers plummeted.
I'm essentially saying he doesn't have it to really be a #1, but has it to be a #2. I believe some people are underrating him thinking of him as a #3.


tsherkin wrote:
This season from 10-16 feet he's shooting .375, from 16ft-3P he's shooting .167
Yes, the 16.7% is definitely an outlier and well below his typical performance, which is why I noted I wasn't evaluating based on the 4 games he's played this season to date.
4 games. Don't care. Literally based off of one game over 4 FTA (he had 13 against Philly). Not worth considering at this time.
Sure. But he was taking catch and shoot 3s as his primary volume all year long. The shot came, and it went. Siakam played with us halfway through January, and Barnes was already shooting 32.5% from 3 over the first 2 weeks of January. Siakam's presence meant only so much. We knew that he wasn't any kind of good shooting 3s unless he was wide open, and even then, he hadn't established any sort of consistency.
Number 2 is still hard to believe for me at this point. It's not impossible, but we'd have to see some consequential change. As a #3, we could tailor his looks a lot more and that would be a lot more compelling a notion. Now, only 4 games this season, we haven't had a good chance to evaluate any potential improvements. He wasn't showing any, but he was also subject to sample size issues underselling what he could do at the same time. So we don't have any real idea where he's at just yet.
But we know he can't be a volume perimeter shooter. We know he isn't going to be an elite slasher. We know that his whole game has to be size/strength-based, which limits him in a variety of ways.


Vampirate wrote:I think he's a competent enough shooter inside the 3P line (16ft - 3P) with a large enough sample size where you can give a take where he might be better from 10-16 ft, no guarantees here, but i've always held the position that he's a much better mid range shooter than 3P shooter.
Same with his 3P percentages, there's no way he's going to continue shooting 18.2% from 3 for the rest of the year (and that's one of the main reasons his numbers are meh)
It was odd because he shot near 40% for half the season he played on almost double the volume from the previous season and then under 30% after. I do believe there's a calmative reason for this, but it's subjective.
Most #2 options are really really good at a couple of things, elite at 1 thing but have some sort of glaring flaw that prevents them from being #1 options.
Putting it another way, if Barnes had any of (first step, above average shooting, ball handling) he's pretty much a #1 option.
Of course, but you're still in the mindset of him as a #1, not a #2.
We also need to get a center that actually shoots 3s. Sadly with the way the league is, Yak is an outdated architype I believe.