kobe_vs_jordan wrote:How he going to benefit from playing with Giannis or any other first option? 55% of his shots come between 10 feet and the 3 point line.DD can't shoot or play off ball. Doesn't get off shots close to the rim at 35 like he did in his raptors days.
I would expect his game to stay relatively the same if not get worse playing with a true 1
AussieBuck wrote:Yeah he operates in exactly the same space that your typical superstar operates from. So he's taking up prime real estate to do what a star does but terribly. Pair that with his horrid D and you get one of the worst playoff performers of the modern era.
Well for starters, he’s not the main person being schemed to slow down. That’s important. Secondly, it may result in instances where a team puts a better defender on Giannis vs. putting him on DeRozan allowing him to take advantage. For example, the Knicks might task Anunoby with defending Giannis, but if DeRozan was on a team without Giannis, he may very well draw Anunoby as his defender. That matters as well.
I mentioned this in another thread, but saying DeRozan “can’t shoot” is a little disingenuous. He’s not Andre Roberson out there, and in fact, he has shot 39% from the corner 3 the past 2 seasons. That’s important to consider when you think about how he fits with a team.
The other thing I’d like to point out is how drastically different the shot profiles are between Giannis and DeRozan. 70.6% of Giannis’ shots last year were from between 0-10 ft and 76.4% of DeRozan’s shots last year were from 10+ ft. I don’t see them getting in each others way especially since DeRozan has been knocking down the corner 3 at a good rate and is an underrated passer (meaning if someone is sagging off Giannis for whatever reason, DeRozan can find him).