The Master wrote:bonita_the_frog wrote:Yep i said "And yes i know LeBron played in a different era" but looks like he's going to have a better rookie season than LeBron statistically.
Cooper averaging more fg% .455 vs. LeBron .417
Cooper averaging more ft% .783 vs. LeBron .754
Cooper averaging more rebounds 6.3 vs. LeBron 5.5
Cooper averaging less turnovers 2.2 vs. LeBron 3.5
And the 3pt%, steals and blocks are all a wash!!
LeBron still leads in scoring and assists, but i think Cooper can get to 4.0 or 4.5 assists so LeBron still will lead that but not a blowout!
And Cooper's scoring is currently 15.5 and trending up, so might get close to LeBron's 20.9, or at least get to 18ppg...
So not saying Cooper will have a better rookie season than LeBron, but in raw stats it will be close if my calculations are correct.
Nope.
In 2003/04 season, LeBron was:
13th in points per game
13th in assists per game
36th in VORP
56th in BPM
-2.4 rTS scorer
This is basically an equivalent of 24-6 on 56TS% on heavy minutes in today's game. If you believe that currently a talent pool is much better, you can adjust it whatever you want, but it doesn't make too much sense to compare raw stats of a player from 2004 to the player from 2026, considering that 2004 was the lowest offensive point of the NBA in the XXI century (102.9 ORTG avg). Kobe in 2004 was 5th in the MVP voting and averaged 24-6-5 on 55TS%, so it should put into perspective what LeBron's 21-6-6 on 49TS% really meant at that time.
Flagg, expectedly, is nowhere near LeBron as an 18/19yo.
The Master wrote:bdp31770 wrote:Thank you for posting that. Does it factor in that Lebron played almost 6 more minutes per game than Flagg is?
Stars overall played heavy minutes at that time, so LeBron being 10th in minutes per game is just another example how big load as a team leader he carried straight from high school, and not necessarily an argument in favor of Flagg considering he plays on a pretty bad team so far.
But it is just an unfair comparison for Flagg - LeBron in his 2nd season (in similar age to most rookies in one and done era) averaged 27-7-7 on +3 rTS, Luka being one month younger than 2nd year LeBron as a rookie averaged 21-8-6 on -1 rTS despite being an acclaimed European pro, this is how much ahead of the curve was LeBron as a prospect. And obviously Luka on his own was a superstar in his 2nd year.
You should compare Flagg to many players who went to the NBA straight from high school, age wise, or to Giannis, other than LeBron. And it will display that as rough as Flagg's start to the NBA career is, it's nothing extraordinary even for all-time great players or talents. He's just super young.
The Master wrote:LockoutSeason wrote:Why are you comparing LeBron’s entire rookie season to Cooper’s first 15 games?
In LeBron’s first 15 games he was average 17PPG on 41% shooting. If LeBron came in as a rookie in today’s era people would call him a disappointment after 15 games too.
Well, I'm just saying that rookie LeBron was quite inefficient on a pretty mediocre team, but he played on all-star volume for his era, also, he played in an era where average TS% was 7% lower than this season so far. Comparing raw boxscore numbers or FG% like the user I replied to just doesn't make sense. 49 TS% may look bad without a context, but it is 'only' -2 rTS. 21 PPG is nothing spectacular, but we had only 12 players averaging more that season.
If the other poster's argument was 'hey, LeBron also started slowly his rookie campaign', I wouldn't probably respond, this is correct. I'm pretty sure that Flagg will improve throughout this season as well.
That being said, I don't think it is realistic or fair to compare Flagg to the greatest prospect we've seen in 50 years or so. If you compare him to T-Mac, or rookie KG, or rookie Dwight, or rookie Durant as he was also super young for one and done prospect, it will give you a different picture.
Thought I'd adjust the TS% to the team and the rest of the players. This may be more informative than comparing to the league average. Team environment/quality/supporting cast plays a significant role in an individual player's performance - production, impact, and ultimately value. This is reflected in the box-score statistics, as well as the advanced ones based off it.
2025-26 DAL (not including tonight's loss against NYK) currently has a 104.9 ORtg (-10.7 rORtg). 2003-04 CLE had a 101.4 ORtg (-1.5 rORtg). They're honestly not that far apart in
raw terms, which tells you how historically bad this Dallas offense is. Just a terrible ecosystem for offensive statistical production.
Anyway, here's a comparison of adjusted TS% between Flagg and James:
LeBron: 48.8% TS (1694.4 TSA; 22.16% of team's TSA; 47.3% assisted, 52.7% unassisted)
Rest of team: 50.11% TS (97.4 TS+)
Team overall: 49.82% TS (98.0 TS+)
Cooper: 53.4% TS (218.24 TSA; 14.5% of team's TSA; 41.1% assisted, 58.9% unassisted)
Rest of team: 55.24% TS (96.7 TS+)
Team overall: 54.97% TS (97.1 TS+)
Glossary
TSA - True Shot Attempts
TS+ - Cooper's true shooting percentage relative to rest of team & overall team TS%So, Cooper and LeBron are both starters and are making a similar number of unassisted FGs per game (3.53 vs. 4.16). LeBron has greater offensive primacy (+7.66% of team's TSA; +7.2% USG) and a more clearly defined role. The
relative-to-supporting-cast TS% and
relative-to-team TS% aren't that far off, and I'd expect it to get closer as the season progresses. I'm not sure if Flagg will get the chance to take more shots if AD and, eventually, Kyrie come back. We'll see.
But this is just offense; we're ignoring the other 50% of the game.
2025-26 DAL has a 111.5 DRtg (-4.1 rDRtg). That's a borderline elite defense that's currently ranked 4th. Although Cooper's play-by-play data (+/- per 100 poss, on-court, on-off) hasn't been good, he leads the team in minutes played (505) and defensive win shares (0.8).
I think he's been a positive driver of defensive impact; his rim protection (<6ft: 7.1 DFGA/g, -4.4%) is already a top mark for a wing/SF-PF. It was nearly -8.0% a few games ago, but it has come down a little. Small sample size and all. Still, no one's contesting as many shots at the rim on the team. He's 8th in the league for >6ft DFGA/g. I don't think that's because he's getting targeted, either.
Additionally, he's defending 1-4, proving he can't be mismatch-hunted/targeted, holding opponents to 0.39 ppp (96.1th percentile) in isolation. There's a good post displaying the variety of guys he's been effectively guarding in isolation a few pages back. Includes Harden, Booker, Siakam, Durant, Morant, etc.
I think when you contextualize Flagg & LeBron's performance
with regard to circumstance, they're much closer than one would think. The 2025-26 Mavericks are a defensively-slanted team, and as such, impact & value isn't going to be as readily apparent in the box score.