CntOutSmrtCrazy wrote:tontoz wrote:Dark Faze wrote:We're now statistically in the territory where it's more likely than not that Deni is better than anyone we get in this upcoming draft lul, even including #1 overall
That is ridiculous. Deni is still mediocre from 3 and very turnover prone. Teams leave him open from 3 at times. He was 5-17 last game. Holiday was the hero making 6 threes. Let's not forget that OKC was missing Chet/Jdub/Dort.
Deni might make the All-Star game, might not. Glad he is doing well and winning but lets not get carried away here.
Teams leaving Deni open from three is utter BS, I've watched every Portland game. Most of his threes are now off the dribble, not spot ups, because him and Holiday are the best at penetrating on that team, so he doesn't really benefit from the kick-out at all.
Yes he was 5-17 in that game but 5-6 last six shots and 15-16 from the line. He made made had at least two big buckets down the stretch and made assists on another 2-3 baskets. Also best +/- among starters (+6) in a game won by 2 while pulling down 10 boards and 9 assists. Not to mention he's still sporting a 62 TS% this season. That OKC team missing those players still were whipping the **** out of other teams, OKC is stacked and a juggernaut, you can only play you opponent that's on the floor. They also have wins against a fully healthy Warriors and Nuggets team too, where Deni was integral to both dubs.
The beauty also about his game is he doesn't have to rely on the three point game which he's been fine enough over the last three shooting, shooting essentially league average over the last couple years. He's elite at getting to the rim, drawing contact and getting fouls. You can be an elite 3 without elite three point shooting if you are adept like he is at getting to the rim.
I watched the games. There were times where Deni was open for a 3 on a swing pass and the defenders didn't even try to close out.
I am not saying their strategy is to leave him open from 3 all the time like Castle, but when they have to choose between leaving him open or closing out hard from distance sometimes they are choosing to let him shoot. It makes sense because he is a bigger threat going to the basket.














