hyper316 wrote:Ricky Rubio had a lot of hype, thought to be next pistol pete
Pistol Pete? I did have him as the next Jason Kidd.
But he's obviously not the answer to the OP.
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hyper316 wrote:Ricky Rubio had a lot of hype, thought to be next pistol pete
bonita_the_frog wrote:Was Ewing expected to be as good as Olajuwon or Shaq?
Doctor MJ wrote:You're welcome, and I'm glad it was fun!
I think your assessment of Ewing, Embiid & Hakeem being something of a linear scale of some sort makes sense...but yeah, Embiid's ref-baiting falls (while we all know his body has severe injury tendency) puts him in an entirely different category as a watch.
Re: best scoring seasons. Well, thing there is that Hakeem's separation is about those playoff performances - and this looms large in other comparisons with other rivals (Robinson, Malone, Barkley, etc.).
Re: average PPG. So I'm going to emphasize a thing here that's a more general thing:
Even before the 3-happy 21st century, PPG generally overrated the value added by a traditional big. The thing that's just always there there as a cost is the entry pass, and that cost goes up the more the defense is focused on disrupting the ability for the offense to complete the entry to the big's sweet spot.
There is also typically a cost to volume post scoring where it tends to disactivate the post scorer's teammates unless he's someone adept at attacking in the post and attacking with the pass at the same time.
This then to say, that actually I think both of these guys probably should have lower career PPG than they do - as in, they'd have been more valuable outside of their prime if they could have a more, say, Mutombo-esque role.
Doctor MJ wrote:You can read the details if you're interested but I would say the most interesting wrinkle in our conversation is that their (the 3 active NBA coaches who were architects of the rule) reasons for doing this sure didn't seem to be because they wanted to induce interior volume scoring...but soon enough, NBA coaches started looking to manipulate the defense in a way to allow long (slow) post one-on-one's.
And others might disagree with me, but I'd generally say those coaches were definitely not known for being volume post prone in their strategy, and the fact that by 1987 all 3 were out as coaches and waited at least a season before getting another gig I think hammers home that this was certainly not a case where those coming up with the plan had a secret vision for how to exploit it.
(By contrast, owner Jerry Colangelo architected the signature rule change of the 21st century NBA (mostly kill Illegal Defense) in 2001 with the idea of forcing teams to play faster, and then (with son Bryan as active GM of the Suns) brought in Mike D'Antoni in as an assistant in 2002, promoted him to head in 2003, and then put the entire focus of the 2004 off-season acquiring Nash, which then resulted in the birth of the Pace & Space era in '04-05. Only thing wrong with portraying Jerry as something of an insider trader on this is that he essentially went out to prove that teams who literally did what he said they'd be incentivized to do, would be rewarded.)
2. Michael F-ing Jordan shifted the basketball fan's paradigm (back) toward individual performers. This has been something of an oscillating pendulum in basketball's history. Elite college ball prior to Hank Luisetti (late 30s), and top tier pro ball prior to George Mikan (late 40s), was more about team play than anything that could be recorded in an individual's box score, because teams that spread out their scoring were the ones that dominated.
Doctor MJ wrote:3. I think NBA coaches are generally more comfortable with trying to optimize everything around their chosen star than college coaches traditionally are, and for understandable reasons: The long-term success of traditional college programs involved a culture propagated from class to class, and teammate to teammate, so a strong foundation of basketball principles can be built with the expectation that will outlast any player. In the pros, the expectation was that you had a player for a decade plus, so if you're not building around his talents as well as you possibly can, what exactly are you doing?
I have to note the important modern exception of the Calipari-style college coach who just tries each year to recruit all the best guys, and then tries to figure out a way to make it all work. I would say though that this archetype basically did not exist until the One & Done rule came in (2006), and Calipari's first mega-talented One & Done Kentucky team was in '09-10.
okboomer wrote:Maybe McDyess. In his 6 seasons before his injury he was good though only made an All Star and All NBA once. Then he got hurt and was nowhere close to the same. Alot of these players that come to mind usually got hurt, like Webber, Wall etc.
jmnvcavs wrote:I’d say Blade Griffin gotta be up there
Godymas wrote:
I still can't get over it, this guy let Trae Young's defense get into his head
Maybe the "Big Dog" Glenn Robinson? Was one of the best college players ever and basically held the Bucks hostage for a 10 year contract. Only made a couple of All-Star games and rode the Duncan Spurs to a ring late in his career.
This. Big Dog was supposed to have the career Paul Pierce had and he never got close.
jmnvcavs wrote:I’d say Blade Griffin gotta be up there
kcktiny wrote:Maybe the "Big Dog" Glenn Robinson? Was one of the best college players ever and basically held the Bucks hostage for a 10 year contract. Only made a couple of All-Star games and rode the Duncan Spurs to a ring late in his career.This. Big Dog was supposed to have the career Paul Pierce had and he never got close.
He too was my first thought. First overall pick that held out for what was back then an absurdly large rookie contract, then proceeded to do nothing in the NBA even remotely close to what he did in college. His shooting efficiency, foul drawing, rebounding, even his rates for steals and blocks were all much worse than what he did in college.
Funny, because his first 8 seasons (1994-95 to 2001-02) in the NBA he scored the 4th most points among all players (12010, 21.1 pts/g, only Malone, Shaq, and Payton scored more). But during that time Milwaukee won as many as 50 games in a season just once, actually had a sub .500 record (291-333), with Big Dog playing by far the most minutes on the team. Those 8 years the Bucks were the 7th worst defensive team in the league (106.3 pts/100poss allowed), due in large part to Robinson's poor defense.
dc wrote:kcktiny wrote:Maybe the "Big Dog" Glenn Robinson? Was one of the best college players ever and basically held the Bucks hostage for a 10 year contract. Only made a couple of All-Star games and rode the Duncan Spurs to a ring late in his career.This. Big Dog was supposed to have the career Paul Pierce had and he never got close.
He too was my first thought. First overall pick that held out for what was back then an absurdly large rookie contract, then proceeded to do nothing in the NBA even remotely close to what he did in college. His shooting efficiency, foul drawing, rebounding, even his rates for steals and blocks were all much worse than what he did in college.
Funny, because his first 8 seasons (1994-95 to 2001-02) in the NBA he scored the 4th most points among all players (12010, 21.1 pts/g, only Malone, Shaq, and Payton scored more). But during that time Milwaukee won as many as 50 games in a season just once, actually had a sub .500 record (291-333), with Big Dog playing by far the most minutes on the team. Those 8 years the Bucks were the 7th worst defensive team in the league (106.3 pts/100poss allowed), due in large part to Robinson's poor defense.
Big Dog was a good example of a guy who was physically dominant in college as a PF but had to transition to SF in the pros. He was still able to score, but not nearly as efficiently and he had the play further away from the basket in the pros. He wasn't able to dominate in the same manner that he did in college.
dc wrote:kcktiny wrote:Maybe the "Big Dog" Glenn Robinson? Was one of the best college players ever and basically held the Bucks hostage for a 10 year contract. Only made a couple of All-Star games and rode the Duncan Spurs to a ring late in his career.This. Big Dog was supposed to have the career Paul Pierce had and he never got close.
He too was my first thought. First overall pick that held out for what was back then an absurdly large rookie contract, then proceeded to do nothing in the NBA even remotely close to what he did in college. His shooting efficiency, foul drawing, rebounding, even his rates for steals and blocks were all much worse than what he did in college.
Funny, because his first 8 seasons (1994-95 to 2001-02) in the NBA he scored the 4th most points among all players (12010, 21.1 pts/g, only Malone, Shaq, and Payton scored more). But during that time Milwaukee won as many as 50 games in a season just once, actually had a sub .500 record (291-333), with Big Dog playing by far the most minutes on the team. Those 8 years the Bucks were the 7th worst defensive team in the league (106.3 pts/100poss allowed), due in large part to Robinson's poor defense.
Big Dog was a good example of a guy who was physically dominant in college as a PF but had to transition to SF in the pros. He was still able to score, but not nearly as efficiently and he had the play further away from the basket in the pros. He wasn't able to dominate in the same manner that he did in college.
-Luke- wrote:Saul Goodman wrote:Vince Carter. at a point in 2001 he was considered on par with Kobe.
He's probably the answer for early NBA expectations (first three years or so), but pre draft? He was picked 5th in a draft with a comparatively weak top 4. Were his expectations at draft time that high?