dhsilv2 wrote:If a player can be a top 10 or even 20 guy. Then that profile can absolutely be buffed up into a case for GOAT. That's the point of KG and Robinson.
I don't really see that, no. There's nothing necessary about that capacity at all in my mind.
I actually was going to reference Magic as another not first option to be fair. Especially given the context of the poster who'd defining first option. Just because you're not the first option doesn't mean you're not the best player or even best offensive player. It really just means you're not the first scoring option. Again especially in the context of who's coming up with this.
I am inclined to disagree, but I suppose it does come down to the semantics of "first option." I think "guy who takes the most shots" is a very inadequate, rudimentary definition. I tend to think of it more as "focal offensive player." First option doesn't have to do with shot volume so much as the guy the offense operates from, the decision-maker who is applying the most pressure. Especially when the guy is substituting shooting volume with efficiency to be the second-highest scorer on the team to begin with, when you start to factor in their control over the offense via playmaking...
In any case, circling back to Wemby. He's 21 and in his second season. He's improving visibly along a progression not dissimilar to what we saw from Lebron and KD and many others. His defense is clearly going to be his focus, and he already exerts palpable force on O in games, whether or not he's shooting well. That's an early sign. As he improves and adapts and evolves, we'll have to see where he goes with his strategy and how that affects his impact.
But writing him out of the GOAT conversation now is, of course, wildly foolish nonsense given what he's showing us. He's not guarantee for such, but it's far, far too early to say "he can't be the GOAT because his scoring doesn't look first option caliber."
His scoring is already knocking on the door of Tatum as a mid-20s, +2% rTS guy.... and actually as a 35.8 PTS100 guy, he's scoring at a rate nearly identical to Tatum on similar efficiency. And he has other tools and potential which Tatum does not. So it's pretty clear that he's got the stuff to function as a focal scorer on at least a certain kind of title-contending team.