Bernman wrote:greg4012 wrote:Strong disagree. But, with your misguided dismissal was another worthwhile consideration that you highlighted--Green and Kneuppel are basically nothing alike. Green is an energy bench player that functions as a POA defender on a team that has none. That makes his role inherently valuable for MIL even if hes just OK at it. That's what your DRTG is showing.
Is the point you're trying to make that being a below average athlete is a good thing for translating to NBA defense???
Since you're such a champion for DRTG, what do you make of the fact that Kon has the 2nd worst DRTG on the Duke squad among the top 7 rotation players (behind only Tyrese Proctor)???
You sound like you're Kon's uncle or something with a sphere of basketball observation limited to the state of Wisconsin.
The Bucks' d-rating w/ Green on the court would qualify them for 2nd in the NBA, and it's 1st when he actually mixes in w/ the starting unit. How does that then just make him be good relative to his team?
Green had the 2nd worst d-rating for Northern Iowa & they weren't good w/ him on the court. Duke wasn't that low & had an outstanding D w/ Kon on the court.
The point, as I told you, was you can be even be a good defender w/ strength, effort, & anticipation. Kon just even has to hang, w/ his offensive superiority.
You sound like an immature guy petulantly flailing for an advantage when you got out-pointed in an ever-important discussion about NBA prospects.
Nonsense aside (which is most of your post), you're trying to turn an exception into a rule. Green clearly re-made his game to do one thing well enough to catch on as a role player at the NBA level--POA defender. AKA the Gabe Vincent approach. He had the requisite athleticism/feet to really hone in on that and stick around serving a necessary function for MIL (POA defense) while doing little else but not making mistakes/negative plays either. If that's your aspiration for Kon, then we're generally in alignment in thinking he has a good floor but very limited ceiling.
I can't watch his college tape and see him regularly get walked by faster guards and expect him to be ANYTHING like AJ Green as a defender in the NBA. Can he leverage his stout frame to be an adequate positional defender? Possibly. Will he suddenly develop the foot speed to serve as a POA defender, I'd bet anything the answer to that is NO.
How I see Kon as a defender at the NBA level is likely a one-position defender that can survive limited switches on bigger players that lack skill or offensive creation as long as it's not at the rim. I see him struggling mightily with fast guards. With that, his measurements are pretty important. If he is closer to 6'5 than his listed 6'7, then he's getting closer and closer to no man's land as a defender. If he's 6'7, then I can see him being a 2 position defender and generally neutral. Which would be a win.
I'm 100% sure Kon will be a good spot-up shooter in the NBA. I'm not a big believer in his handle or footspeed to be anything more than an ancillary ballhandler. I think he can be a connective passer. I believe his pull-up shooting numbers and dunk numbers are huge red flags.
Enjoy your cheese.