Optms wrote:Liam_Gallagher wrote:Am I gonna get ostracized if I say he shoots WAY too many threes?
At this point, it's like you walking into your local McDonalds and complaining everyone is eating beef.
Nah, it's a legit concern. When his 3 goes, he doesn't seem to have an answer for what to fall back on besides bricking more threes. It's a worthwhile thing to note. There are good examples of guys who balance it all together in various places around the league. Tatum, and Boston in general, is an example of a polar extreme.
KG Leonard wrote:Next they will say Gary Payton is better scorer than Tatum jesus, Pippen as s scorer can't even be compared. Scoring is up as an excuse to look down on historic playoffs scorer like Tatum? Don't people watch the actual NBA playoffs?
Tatum is beating scoring feats by Bird, Havlicek and not to mention other ATG with his playoffs scoring performance. Regular season stats don't matter there.
I don't remember Pippen having scoring ability like 50 points in game 7 Vs Philly or 46 points Vs Bucks away when they were champions. Well said about the gravity, that poster is making it sound like Pippen carried the offensive load like an MJ.

Yeah. I mean, I'm quick to have some things to say about Tatum in certain kinds of conversations, and I was a Pippen fan in the 90s, but the idea that Pippen is a comparable scorer to Tatum is a bit of a joke. And outside of the Finals, Tatum's playoff offense has been pretty good. And he's made some notable strides as a playmaker. Pippen produced assists well in the triangle and even in late, in Houston and Portland, he showed good court awareness and playmaking and stuff, but I never saw a huge gap in what he was doing compared to what Tatum is doing right now.
Pippen definitely didn't carry the load. He was the leading scorer in 94 and 95, sure, but he was only okay at that and he dropped off in the playoffs. Tatum, for whatever faults one might assign him, scores a fair amount for Boston and Pippen has never come close to his per-possession scoring rate. Tatum's on like his 4th or 5th straight season of 36+ PTS100. Pip was mostly a < 0.9 ScoreVal guy, hovering around PlayVal of 1, never got north of 23.4 inflation-adjusted points per 75, had two seasons with Chicago with an rTS% better than 1.6% (and they were early, while the league was faster), 5-6 Box Creation, Passer Rating of 6-7.
Sticking with just the stats for a second, Tatum's at a similar ScoreVal, PlayVal, averages around 27 IA-PTS75, rTS% his 2.4% in 2023, Box Creation of 8-10, Passer Rating around 5.
Come 2024, 24.3 IA-PTS75, +2.4% rTS again, Box Creation 10, Passer Rating 7.3, ScoreVal 0, PlayVal 1.3.
2025 so far, 27.9 IA-PTS75, +1.9% rTS, Box Creation 10.7, Passer Rating 6.0, ScoreVal 1.0, PlayVal 1.1.
So you're seeing no real separation as a playmaker (which matches watching the two play) and that he's scoring more on what is typically a superior rTS on that larger volume. There's something like a 6- to 7-point difference in raw PTS100 between the two, and Tatum's really just playing at late 80s/early 90s pace, which is back when Pippen was able to score efficiently with his lack of reliable range and with more transition possessions. Obviously, there's something to be said for that helping Tatum, as well as the embrace of the 3, but the short three didn't help Scottie that much from 95-97, when he was still just a 103 TS+ guy with a 3PAr of .292, which is fairly contemporary (and was .239, .333 and .310, for clarity). 30% of his shots were threes and he wasn't clearly +2% rTS in any of those seasons, because he wasn't that good a shooter, which was part of his limitation. And because a boob at the foul line, too.
So that's a lot of stat rant, but it's clear that Tatum supports higher volume on better efficiency while functioning to create for his teammates at least as well (despite higher offensive load) and summoning strong D along the way.
Pippen is a bad comparison.