gswhoops wrote:NGL I get Andre Drummond vibes from him. Super athlete, questionable motivation, great rim runner/lob finisher and rebounder but not as good a defender as you'd expect/hope given his size and athleticism and not a factor on offense outside of the paint.
I can give you the full scouting report here, having witnessed both at a young age in Detroit.
Athletically, Duren is a little bouncier with much better hands. He’s also significantly less wide, which is what made Drummond unique — he was a huge guy, big legs and stout top to bottom while still highly athletic. That’s what made Drummond a generational rebounder, while Duren is just very good. It’s only been a stat since 70-71, but did you know Drummond is the all-time NBA leader in total rebound percentage at 25.1%?
As a finisher, Duren is superior. He has good touch and plays with force. You’d get excited when Drummond went straight up and dunked on someone because it typically happened once a week, while Duren does it every game. Too many soft layups with Drummond. AD’s career high in dunks was 183 in his age 20 season. JD had 219 last year in far fewer minutes (2619 to 2034).
Drummond experimented with being a passing hub and ball handler but it was never impressive. Duren’s a better passer, a very nice one for your typical athletic big. Nothing special as of yet, though. Might be some potential there.
Neither has range, although Drummond’s taken a few more jumpers as a veteran. Average (not really a) shot distance is 3.4 to 3.2, so yeah, paint players only.
Defensively, Drummond was not good, but he was better than Duren is now. They share the same problems of defending stretch bigs and the perimeter in general, and not doing a good job of weak side help because of slow reads. Drummond was a better man defender because he was basically immovable with his tree trunk legs, but you could still beat him. This is Duren’s biggest issue — his effort and ability on defense are highly questionable.
So yeah, kinda similar, but not exactly. Drummond got a max second contract on a bad team in a somewhat different era, but it was almost immediately apparent it was a mistake. Duren won’t get that, but wants more than the market indicates he’s worth.