pancakes3 wrote:doc, how does kemba not just REEK of ben gordon to you?
3-cakes:
Passing, leadership, positional defense, game management, kairotic sense (timing), even rebounding. I follow UConn since I was young-- Kemba is no Ben Gordon, nor Marcus Williams, nor Khalid El-Amin (loved that kid) ...
Kemba is one of those rare scorers who learned to adapt and run a team. He's the best scorer on the team but at this point defers by default, then turns up the scoring when the team absolutely needs him to do so. He converted his positional awareness and offensive tunnel vision to a complete team game. You pick it up in the little things.
An example from the KY game: his squad knocks a pass into the air, flying out of bounds, Kemba dove out of bounds and tapped the player directly to the hands of his teammates -- not blind, not to the opponent, not as a wild hope-- but as if it were a simple pass, running back onto the court as soon as he landed, picking up in the transition offense. And he's talking the whole time, instructing young talent where to be, when to cut, hitting them in the hands with the ball right when they're open. Helping them grow up on court.
What's intriguing to me is that adaptation. Evolution. I watch players closest who show an ability to improve. Entering the NBA the players who succeed over the long term are those who can tinker with their games and adapt to find a role. Kemba Walker catches my eye as a high usage player who rarely gives the ball away, that's a bonus. What's better: each year of his college career his pure passing metrics have significantly improved while his fouls decrease. He's posting a Stef Curry-esque usage rate, while maintaining that 2.0+ asst/TO ratio, and has cut his shot attempts per assist each year, this year especially, despite having only one other significant offensive player on his squad. That trend indicates a player who will learn and improve.
Ben Gordon by contrast had a beautiful long range shot, and a gunners mentality, who posted negative pure passing ratings despite playing next to future NBAers in Cholly Villopecia, Emeka Okafor, Caron Butler, etc.