Knightro wrote:KillMonger wrote:i disagree, i think the role players have a lot to do with it....for example bron was never known for being a great 3pt shooter so spacing was important for him because it didn't allow teams to just load up the paint....bron only recently became a decent shooter that wasn't the case early in his career and certainly wasn't so in his 3rd year....plus 2016 had david blatt as the coach, a coach that's known for offense......nobody would be standing around in a david blatt offense....these things matter it isn't just the individual, that is only part of the equation.....at least how i see it
LeBron overcame his lack of consistent perimeter shooting early in his career by being one of the best passing forwards in the history of the NBA. He was also, especially early in his career, pretty much impossible to keep from getting to the rim because of his athleticism. Luka same thing although it wasn't pure athleticism - it was the ability to get to any spot on the floor off the dribble.
These are historically elite traits Banchero and Wagner simply don't have. They're good passers, but LeBron and Luka are all time great passers.
Banchero and Wagner are very good at getting to the rim and finishing, but Luka, LeBron and Kyrie are all time greats at getting to and finishing at the rim.
And you are incorrect about Blatt. The 2015 Cavs led the NBA in isolations in Blatt's first year. The 2016 Cavs were 5th in the NBA in isolations when Blatt got fired.
Comparing Banchero and Wagner to LeBron and Luka is a bit of a strawman. No one’s saying they’re generational passers or finishers on that level—but holding every young star to that standard misses the point. You don’t need to be an all-time great to be a top option on a contending team.
Banchero is already making some good reads, and Wagner’s slashing and finishing are among the best in the league. They’re not doing it with LeBron-level athleticism or Luka-level control, but they’re producing and doing it without the spacing those guys benefit from. when it comes to blatt you misrepresented what i said about him, i said he wouldn't have us standing around in his offense.....he pretty much ran the princeton offense, if you followed what happened back then iirc blatt's offense was rejected in favor of a more isolation style.....which makes sense if you looked at how he ran offense overseas

































