[b]Hasheem Thabeet vs Roy Hibbert[/b]
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[b]Hasheem Thabeet vs Roy Hibbert[/b]
- slanno_23
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[b]Hasheem Thabeet vs Roy Hibbert[/b]
Just our opinion on who is better now, and at the end of their careers????
- FNQ
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BadWolf wrote:What makes Thabeet any better then Steven Hunter?
What makes Hibbert any better than Greg Ostertag?
And Thabeet seems to be (when his heads on straight) a lot closer to Deke than to Hunter... one more year of seasoning / gaining consistency is the right move and he should be applauded for not chasing the money.
On the flip side, if he entered, he likely would have been drafted at 15+, so he'd be on a playoff team.. much more likely to have a vet help him develop into a better player. Such is the tradeoff though.
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bryant08
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BBen
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What makes Hibbert any better than Greg Ostertag?
What makes being like Greg Ostertag a bad thing? He was a solid 20mpg starter/fringe bench player who was on a very competitive Utah team for years. Not a star sure, but all you need is solid at C most of the time. I don't know what makes people so attracted to these players who just started playing because they're tall. What makes someone good is desire and love of the game. Without those things what leads you to believe he'll care about improving his game once he signs a big contract? Name me three players who made a big impact in the NBA after starting to play ball 5-6 years before.
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BBen wrote:Name me three players who made a big impact in the NBA after starting to play ball 5-6 years before.
I don't know about three players, but Hakeem Olajuwon averaged 20 points/12 boards/2.5 blocks in the league six years after he first touched a basketball.
...not that Thabeet is about to become another Hakeem, of course...
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Egg Nog wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
I don't know about three players, but Hakeem Olajuwon averaged 20 points/12 boards/2.5 blocks in the league six years after he first touched a basketball.
...not that Thabeet is about to become another Hakeem, of course...
Dikembe Mutombo originally attended Georgetown on a USAID scholarship, and had to be recruited by John Thompson to play basketball! He was originally a pre-med.
A player like Tim Duncan might not technically count, but he would've been a lottery pick easily after his Sophomore year in college, at which point he had been playing 6 years (started in 9th grade).
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BBen
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Players like Mutombo and Dalembert have/had reasons to improve. They are true philanthropists and among other things want to improve their home countries with the wad of cash that they make. The better the play the bigger the wad and the more investment they can make. Does Thabeet have that? Players that have to improve (we'll all agree Thabeet has a looooong way to go) need a strong desire. Has there been any evidence of this from Thabeet?
Hibbert is already solid and the Georgetown system doesn't tolerate people who don't work hard.
Hibbert is already solid and the Georgetown system doesn't tolerate people who don't work hard.
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DanTown8587 wrote:Its really what you need: if you want better offense than go Roy Hibbert, but if you want defense/rebounding go Thabeet.
QFT. I think it's a pretty clear offense/defense split, though I think Hibbert will be able to play very good defense on centers that aren't super-athletic. Unfortunately for him there are fewer of those around nowadays, and I don't think he's ever going to become a good rebounder. Thabeet learning to play offense is conceivable, but probably unlikely.
















