deck wrote:You have not shown this at all. Factually, Barnes has very similar TS at the same age, and on much high usage and volume than Lowry.
Lowry:
Age 20: 56.5%TS 5.6ppg
Age 21: 53.1%TS 9.6ppg
Age 22: 54.7%TS 7.6ppg
Age 23: 53.6%TS 9.1ppg
Barnes:
Age 20: 55.2%TS 15.3ppg
Age 21: 52.4%TS 15.8ppg
Age 22: 56.6%TS 20.5ppg
Age 23: 52.2%TS 20.7ppg
So for starters, comparing raw TS% across eras a dozen years distant doesn't make a ton of sense.
To whit:
Lowry:
20: +2.4%
21: +0.1%
22: +0.3%
23: -0.7%
Barnes:
20: -1.4%
21: -5.7%
22: -1.4%
23: -5.3%
So from a league-relative perspective, he's been brutal. Lowry was not. Lowry was not amazing, but he had better success scoring efficiently relative to his peers and league environment.
How exactly have you show this apart from pointing to Lowry's college years, which are largely irrelevant?
Reading would be helpful here. We did talk about his shooting ability from 10-23 feet, which has been superior to Barnes from his second season forward. From age 20-23, Lowry has been a 41.4% / 42.2% shooter from 10-16 and 16-23 feet. Barnes has been 38.2 / 37.8%. And Lowry was taking 16% of his shooting volume as those long twos, so this isn't an issue with sample size.
Over that same stretch, he was a 77% FT shooter, but shot 80.1% or better in 3 of those 4 seasons.
And come on man, don't say his stats from his rookie year are 'a little light' to be used to quantify his shooting ability. Just say you were wrong.
I mean, no, I wasn't. His shooting ability is demonstrably superior. His 3pt shooting on low volume was not, but his shooting ability was very, very clearly superior.
Lower usage generally leads to higher efficiency. Lowry in Memphis and in Houston was low efficiency
Mediocre efficiency but better than Barnes relative to his league, yes. But you'll notice as his 3PAr rose, so too did his efficiency. And as his volume increased, so too the impact of his high draw rate and quality FT shooting.
on significantly lower usage than Barnes. Barnes was the 4th option in his rookie year, and showed far more than Lowry did in any of his first 4 seasons.
That is mostly certainly VIOLENTLY inaccurate. Barnes hasn't showed us dick-all as a scoring threat, lol.
I guess your definition of abrasive and mine differ slightly. When someone shows factually that I am wrong about something, I admit it. Abrasive to me would be to double down on an incorrect position, selectively quote someone to remove portions of what was said, and then attempt to move the discussion elsewhere, like introducing assist percentage which had nothing to do with the original challenges that were raised. That to me would be abrasive.
This is clearly not true. We acquired Lowry for Gary Forbes and a draft pick that would later become Steven Adams. If Lowry at age 26 had shown so much, why was he acquired for a guy who was out of the league two years later, and a 12th overall pick? Why did we try later to trade him for Raymond Felton? Would you trade Barnes right now for a future 12th overall? lol. Your position is absurd, and not historically accurate.
This is a non-sequitur to the point made. Houston wasn't looking to expand Lowry's role because they had other pieces in place.
Again, it's not absurd, you're just not processing that Lowry's ability was already there, but his opportunity to take shots wasn't.
ArthurVandelay's original position, as I understood it, is that Barnes could end up fulfilling a role similar to Lowry. He wasn't making a direct comparison between Barnes' assist percentages or free throw rates, he was talking more about the role they could both play on a successful team.
He has subsequently clarified for me, yes.
My only assertions to you was to first highlight how absurd it was for you to try to use Lowry's rookie season 3pt shooting to rationalize that he was a much better shooter than Barnes, and then secondly to respond to your assertions that Lowry was much further along in his development than Barnes.
He was much further along. Very visibly. And there are other components to shooting than just 3P%.