9 and 20 wrote:Wemby took it to Sarr like Shaq did with Shawn Bradley.
In terms of scoring yes. But Shaq shot from 3 ft or closer. VW was draining what were
nearly logo shots.
(didn't notice Zards made the same comment)
Moderators: LyricalRico, nate33, montestewart
9 and 20 wrote:Wemby took it to Sarr like Shaq did with Shawn Bradley.
dobrojim wrote:9 and 20 wrote:Wemby took it to Sarr like Shaq did with Shawn Bradley.
In terms of scoring yes. But Shaq shot from 3 ft or closer. VW was draining what were
nearly logo shots.
(didn't notice Zards made the same comment)
dobrojim,dobrojim wrote:Was watching the Bucks-Bulls game last night and admiring how Giannis was dominating.
I drifted into a possibly far fetched fantasy about Sarr. What kind of numbers did Giannis
put up in his first 2-3 years? My memory is hazy and I'm too lazy to look it up
but my recollection is that it took him at least 3 years to begin to resemble
the player he became. I remember him as a skinny kid with little impact.
I've been visting and contributing a little to the WaPo sports page and
commenting on some of the harsh (as I see it) criticism of
Sarr which I see as premature given his age. My wet dream is he becomes
something like Giannis/Mobley or Bam. The kid is only 19. I'm not gonna say
I think he will become something like any of those guys as there is also a
possibility he becomes more like countless other players who never reached
that level. But he (Sarr) does have some gifts and potential. Of course how
well he realizes his potential is an open question. It's obviously early days.
But since we're losing so bad, what else are we gonna talk about?
tontoz wrote:dobrojim wrote:9 and 20 wrote:Wemby took it to Sarr like Shaq did with Shawn Bradley.
In terms of scoring yes. But Shaq shot from 3 ft or closer. VW was draining what were nearly logo shots.
(didn't notice Zards made the same comment)
Sengun and Jaren Jackson did abuse Sarr inside over and over to score their season highs. I haven't seen Sarr play good man D against any big.
Dark Faze wrote:I do encourage him to experiment and try to reach whatever ceiling he believes he has offensively, but I'm also aware that shooting improvement tends to have a limited range of improvement.
DCZards wrote:Dark Faze wrote:I do encourage him to experiment and try to reach whatever ceiling he believes he has offensively, but I'm also aware that shooting improvement tends to have a limited range of improvement.
I believe the opposite is true. Shooting is an area where a player can improve significantly over time. Many have.
For example, Evan Mobley, a player Sarr is often compared to, shot 25% from 3 his rookie season and 22% his second year. Last year, he shot 37% from 3 and this year he’s shooting 38%.
Deni is another example. While his 3pt shooting is down this season, he went from 31% his rookie season to 37% last year.
But shooting aside, I most excited about Sarr’s potential to be a game changer on defense. His combo of size, length, fluidity, and athleticism is rare. That’s Sarr’s secret sauce and why I wanted him with the second pick.
tontoz wrote:DCZards wrote:Dark Faze wrote:I do encourage him to experiment and try to reach whatever ceiling he believes he has offensively, but I'm also aware that shooting improvement tends to have a limited range of improvement.
I believe the opposite is true. Shooting is an area where a player can improve significantly over time. Many have.
For example, Evan Mobley, a player Sarr is often compared to, shot 25% from 3 his rookie season and 22% his second year. Last year, he shot 37% from 3 and this year he’s shooting 38%.
Deni is another example. While his 3pt shooting is down this season, he went from 31% his rookie season to 37% last year.
But shooting aside, I most excited about Sarr’s potential to be a game changer on defense. His combo of size, length, fluidity, and athleticism is rare. That’s Sarr’s secret sauce and why I wanted him with the second pick.
I am concerned about his efficiency and his defense lol
His efficiency isn't just bad from 3, it's also bad on 2s. His shooting 46% on 2s which is awful for a big. Mobley's career worst from 2 was 54% his rookie year.
Sarr's man defense against other bigs has been bad. He is weak and his length is just ok for a center, making him an easy target.


DCZards wrote:tontoz wrote:DCZards wrote:I believe the opposite is true. Shooting is an area where a player can improve significantly over time. Many have.
For example, Evan Mobley, a player Sarr is often compared to, shot 25% from 3 his rookie season and 22% his second year. Last year, he shot 37% from 3 and this year he’s shooting 38%.
Deni is another example. While his 3pt shooting is down this season, he went from 31% his rookie season to 37% last year.
But shooting aside, I most excited about Sarr’s potential to be a game changer on defense. His combo of size, length, fluidity, and athleticism is rare. That’s Sarr’s secret sauce and why I wanted him with the second pick.
I am concerned about his efficiency and his defense lol
His efficiency isn't just bad from 3, it's also bad on 2s. His shooting 46% on 2s which is awful for a big. Mobley's career worst from 2 was 54% his rookie year.
Sarr's man defense against other bigs has been bad. He is weak and his length is just ok for a center, making him an easy target.
All of the things you say are true. And I’m not dismissing or overlooking any of these issues.
But aren’t some of these problems to be expected given that Sarr is an inexperienced, skinny 19 yr old?
What I like is the raw potential that I see in the youngin.
