Double Helix wrote:Schadenfreude wrote:Dr Mufasa wrote:Bargnani's efficiency at that volume IS reasonable. It's exactly "reasonable".
Not if reasonable = productive and useful over the long haul. You don't build a team around a guy who takes over 20% of the team's shots while being 20 points below the league average in TS%. Any team worth anything is going to have better scorers than that, and thus put Bargs out of a role.
All this league average talk about TS% is irrelevant though, Schad. It's been discussed in this thread a lot but are you really going to compare guys who are asked to take 15+ FGAs per game with scrubs shooting .600+% on 4 FGAs per game?
The league average is massively inflated due to low volume scorers. The following list seems reasonable. It's players playing 25 minutes per game who take at least 10 FGAs per game.
http://bkref.com/tiny/dTsEt
That's reasonable for a third banana type, no?
Even when he's compared to some of the highest volume scorers in the NBA (players who average more that 16 FGAs per game) he's not looking awful and these are the best scorers in all of the NBA we're talking about here.
http://bkref.com/tiny/tSDGf
He's .03 off from being the 13th best TS% player of the 21 players currently averaging more than 16 FGAs per game and also the 11th youngest. It's certainly nothing to write home about and it doesn't excuse his flaws and allow us to be excited about the idea of him as a team's best player but I think it's reasonable to expect that percentage to climb if he was to play with a star SG, PG or SF due to all the open looks he'd get. His PER, his TS%, his role as a scorer all scream third banana type to me.
Lumping him in with players that play every position is wrong. There is plenty of historic data to show that guards and wing players historically have lower TS% and offensive efficiency because of how/where the game is played for their role on offense. (Please don't make me hunt these numbers down, I think this is a common knowledge thing but I will if I have to).
So technically, unless you can play Bargs at a wing position so that the team can still benefit from the higher efficiency front court scoring teammates (or if Bargs is that good that he elevates his teammates efficiency to that type of level), the team he plays for will always be at a disadvantage when it comes to overall team efficiency.
Compound that with his inability to competently defend at any position and that his rebounding rate is that of a good rebounding guard and you now have a player who really is a man without an identity.















