canada_dry wrote:Scase wrote:PushDaRock wrote:
If the sport is hitting the target and you can move closer to the target to hit it more accurately and you start doing that more often, did you not improve your end result or not?
Except he isn't playing exactly like he did in NYC.  His career best in APG is 3.0, he's at 6.5 APG this year.  He's in a different role now than he ever has been in his career, he's never had this much responsibility to both handle scoring and creating for others before so I don't think it makes too much sense to be overly critical over the 12 game sample size because of some regression in efficiency which I think is to be expected in the first place.
Yeah, and his USG% is also at a career high as well. No one is arguing he isn't putting up more counting stats, his AST% has shot up and his TOV% is only slightly elevated, which is awesome. But for the millionth time, I have no issues with that, what I have issues with is him being one of the least efficient players in the NBA, stop trying to move the goalposts.
MEDIC wrote:
One could argue that the NY coaching staff didn't put him in a position to be successful. They didn't identify his strengths & utilize them properly. It's every leaders responsibility to find their employees stengths & put them in a position to succeed. 
Basically what the arguement comes down to is "NY sucked at role management for RJ. The Raptors have been very successful at it". 
Is RJ a more useful player here than he was in NY because ot proper role management & utilization? Seems like it.
Whether or not the player "improved" is not as important as "is the player more successful"..
This is a very reasonable point, and I agree wholeheartedly. It's what I've been saying, the player themselves has not been the improvement, the situation has. And if that is a better end result, I'm happy. But there is a very big difference from a better fitting system, and a better 
player. If RJ continued to be even remotely efficient despite the issues we've been seeing, I'd not have said a thing, but he's not even close to league average, and that's the issue. A player is valuable based on their contributions, but if you have to have a perfect environment for that player to perform well, and anything less results in bottom of the league performance, then you should be extremely careful how important that player is in the grand scheme of the team.
canada_dry wrote:Why do you take into consideration the role change when it comes to his improvement, but you don't consider the role change when trashing his efficiency this year?You seem to only consider things when it suits you and ignore the exact same context in your next paragraph at times.
Yes. His role changed and he played more efficiently as a result last year.  This year he has the ball way more than he normally would, with a much higher usage rate, and as a result his efficiency has suffered, which happens. If it doesn't then you're something of a superstar. His playmaking has taken a big step, that wasn't something he was nearly as good at in the past even on the knicks when he had the ball a lot too. Thats called improvement and development, yes even in his 6th season 
 Why's it crazy to think once hes playing In a secondary or even tertiary role , and we once again simplify his role and shot diet, he wouldn't play similarly to last year and his efficiency wouldn't be something similar? Rather than whining about his efficiency so far as if this is the player he is and this is his role going forward? In fact if he can go back to something similar to those 30 games and on top of that add his improving pick n roll game especially with jak...again, thats an improved basketball player. 
Why is the 30 games not so relevant even though it provided us a window into how he should be used, but the 12 or so games so far this year ARE relavant even though its a role he won't be playing under normal circumstances? 
Doesnt seem right to me. Something is off. Your bias might he showing. 
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It was literally the second to last line of the post you quoted.
The system has changed due to a bunch of injuries, and his efficiency has plummeted.
Dalek wrote:I think I have seen enough of RJ to see the Pascal like qualities. The guys can get All-Star type numbers on sometimes iffy shooting splits, but ultimately at the end of the game they are the last guy I want to have the ball. He has been in at least four game-winning/tying situations and he has either missed a shot or missed freethrows in the clutch.
Not having Scottie or IQ around has really forced RJ into a lead handler role which I think distorts his value. He looked better to me as a guy playing off the catch or cut rather than creating his own shot.
This is it to me. If people want to be happy with he's produced so far, then so be it. But it is absurd considering we've all seen this song and dance before, to just ignore all the neon signs pointing to the same limiting issues we've seen with multiple other players here baffles me.
If you want to scream from the rooftops at how great he was last year due to the system changing, then you get to hear the inverse when he tanks due to the system changing. Sorry I don't get hyped over a player that is limited and only produces at a high level when they are in a perfect situation, we've seen plenty of those over the years, and they never lead to anything.
 
I didn't say you calling his scoring inefficient was your bias. No. In fact i would agree with that as i think most would...Your ignoring certain things due to sample size but ignore sample size to speak about his struggles scoring efficiently the past 12 games, is what i referred to as your bias showing.This is what me and multiple others now have called you out on but you're making up your own arguments in your head.
You're ignoring the fact that the role he's playing on this team right now is not one hes ever had before and will probably never have again. That includes his 300+ with the knicks, hes NEVER had this load as a #1 option while he was on the knicks. Thats nonsense and blatantly untrue , and on top of that yogurt calling you out for misrepresenting his hot streaks on the knicks... this is your bias showing. You're equating the 12 games so far this year to his 300+ as a knick when his role is still not all that similar.
I don't think anyone has argued his scoring has been particularly efficient. I haven't seen it.
They're simply trying to give you context about role and how that effects efficiency  that you're continuing to ignore over and over again by trying to say its the same as on the knicks, but its just not. 
We can easily come to a common ground and say he isnt being efficient and this isn't his most ideal role...But we should also be able to agree that his role currently is due to necessity and he'll be better on a healthier Raptor team and probably be closer to what we need from him and he'll be considerably more efficient in that secondary or tertiary role than the one he's in right now, and that his playmaking has been clearly better than its ever been in his career as you pointed out much higher assist rates with the turnover rate not increasing too much. Thats an improved and improving player in their 6th season. 
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I never suggested he was played as first option on the knicks. I commented on the scoring game, the types of shots, and the efficiency of those shots being the same. Stop reading into things that aren't there.
As for whatever yogurt said, I can't comment, I have him blocked so I don't see his posts.
I don't dispute he's in a bad position right now, what I was saying in regard to his NYC performances, is that his shot diet is largely the same. And everything he did in the 30 games that seem to be what is considered more important than the other 300, he is no longer doing this season. Hence the small sample size. His 12 games are too small a sample size, his 312+ games are not.
It takes like 2 minutes to see this.
68.7% of all his FGA with the Knicks were 2p FGs
68.8% of all his FGA with us this year were 2p FGs
75.6% of all his FGA with us last year were 2p FGs
32.5% of all his FGA with the Knicks were 0-3ft
27.8% of all his FGA with us this year were 0-3ft
43.1% of all his FGA with us last year were 0-3ft
24.4% of all his FGA with the Knicks were 3-10ft
33.8% of all his FGA with us this year were 3-10ft
29.3% of all his FGA with us last year were 3-10ft
7% of all his FGA with the Knicks were 10-16ft
4.6% of all his FGA with us this year were 10-16ft
2.8% of all his FGA with us last year were 10-16ft
4.9% of all his FGA with the Knicks were 16ft-3p
2.5% of all his FGA with us this year were 16ft-3p
0.4% of all his FGA with us last year were 16ft-3p
31.3% of all his FGA with the Knicks were 3p 
31.2% of all his FGA with us this year were 3p
24.4% of all his FGA with us last year were 3p 
If you can't see something this obvious staring you right in the face, there isn't much to discuss here. Shots he should be taking went down, shots he shouldn't be taking, went up.