VFX wrote:Knightro wrote:RookieStar wrote:Can you do Sheppard and Cason as well? They were the smallish PG i was intrigued with last draft
Rob DillinghamBarefoot Height: 6'1"
Standing Reach: 7'11''
Wingspan: 6'3''
Weight: 164.2 lbs
Jase RichardsonBarefoot Height: 6'0 1/2"
Standing Reach: 8'2 1/2''
Wingspan: 6'6"
Weight: 178.4 lbs
Reed SheppardBarefoot Height: 6'1 3/4"
Standing Reach: 7'9 1/2''
Wingspan: 6'3 1/3"
Weight: 181.6 lbs
Cason WallaceBarefoot Height: 6'2 1/2''
Standing Reach: 8'5''
Wingspan: 6'8 1/2''
Weight: 195.2
I get the idea behind making the comparisons here.
The size isnt the issue overall when we are comparing him to every recently drafted player in the league.
The issue is moreso the fact that we are comparing him to point guards that are 100% point guards with point guard skillsets.
Is Jase a point guard with a point guard skillset? From most accounts I've heard he's basically a very undersized 2 guard connector right now that is a gifted shooter and finisher. These guys you are listing are non-versatile point guards.
Jase is like Jordan Crawford minus 3 inches, Jamal Crawford minus 4, in height right now as a comp. Thats a good player, but lets not overcomplicate the reason why he was #25 and not a top 15 pick. He absolutely CAN become a point guard and maybe he will prove he is in time relative to this list and not just a connector/finisher, which he is labeled now.
Meh.
Just my personal opinion, but I wouldn't really say any of Sheppard, Dillingham or Wallace were considered high level point guard prospects in their respective drafts. Perhaps they flashed more point guard skills than Richardson did, but Michigan State already had Jeremy Fears who was a high recruit the year before Jase got there and he has more of that pure point guard skill set.
Izzo needed to use Jase more of a scorer for their team to be most successful, especially once they moved him into their starting lineup in the second half of the year.
And as far as the Jordan/Jamal Crawford comparisons... man...
Jordan C as a freshman averaged on a 9.7 PPG on a .533 TS%. It was 25 years ago, but Jamal C had just a .507 TS% in his lone college season.
You may think Jase has a similar play style to those guys, but he succeeded at levels so far beyond anything either one of those guys even came close to approaching. That stuff matters, right?
"Oh he's small, and he won't be able to score efficiently because of his size."
Well why not? He scored extremely efficiently in college at that size. Why wouldn't it continue? He clearly figured it out at the level he was playing at in ways plenty of other guys his size simply were not able to.