tsherkin wrote:SGA is a little underrated, but he's also working on only his 3rd season doing it at this volume, and doesn't have the playoff resume quite yet.
Kobe... was very good. And I think some of his raw numbers were suppressed early on in his 20s because he was playing next to Shaq, and that's generally the time in a guy's career where he posts his best numbers. I think he wasn't as good a shooter as Shai and that his shot selection exacerbated the problem because he dwelled deeply in an older, archaic mentality with respect to his approach to the game.
Between the two? Hard to tall. Shai is obviously a better FT shooter and a better 3pt shooter. He uses the long two like a third as much as Kobe did, and that was a 40% shot for Bryant, whereas Shai smashes the short middie at rates Kobe never could have. I think it reinforces that his ground game is fairly focused and he's working to get to his specific spots a lot, and that he's trying not to take those long twos and just step back for the three when he's that far. And he's pretty good at getting to the rim and all that.
Is he better overall? I dunno. Maybe. I'd love to have seen Kobe in todays environment. But yeah, I think Shai's a little more focused on doing it the best way, and not just doing it HIS way, plus he's a better shooter, so that helps.
Lalouie wrote:maybe today's nba game is overrated
the context is the league 3pt fga has doubled since kobe's era
Honestly, this is a useless remark. Kobe took 4.1 3PA/g on his career; Shai takes 3.6. 3pt shooting volume isn't relevant to a comparison of these two as scorers. The fact that Shai's a career 85.4% FT shooter who has shot 90.5 and 87.4% the past two years and is posting 88% now is a much bigger deal. Kobe was a career 83.7% shooter who posted 85%+ 4 times (5, if you count his 6-game season) and never shot over 86.8%. He was very good, but not as good. And then of course, Shai's mid-range shot is a very different animal. If there was going to be a difference, it would center around ability to reach the paint. Kobe got to the rim about as frequently by proportion as does Shai, and that was back then. And he shot 63.7%, which was pretty good in-era. That would improve in today's game, and probably by 5 or 6%, maybe more. That could make a difference in his overall picture as a player in today's environment.
But league 3PA don't mean anything when the two guys are taking a comparable volume of 3PA/g.
We know that Shai is a better shooter who stands out more relative to his peers. We know that Kobe liked to take shots he shouldn't have done, but also that he would have had an easier time of things in today's environment. It's a tough call and an interesting comparison. Kobe is a dude who has fanatical support that is often at odds with his actual play, but he was also still a scintillating talent. And it's interesting to ponder how he might have developed 20 years into the future, coming up watching guys play differently than when he came up watching MJ and so forth. The ideas and theories of how to be good influencing him in different ways at a young age and all that. If he played as he played in the 2000s, then Shai would definitely be better, but Kobe wasn't as inelastic as some believe, to be fair.