Marlo Stanfield wrote:Rhettmatic wrote:It's weird how everyone keeps talking about Lamb "falling" to us when every draft site is projecting him way lower than our pick.
It's because no one understands why that is. Also, judging by his physical gifts he'll be a workout legend.
As I said in another thread, he fell because he settled way too much this year (even with the Bazz the moron factor), as I observed in the key games he played. The stats support this. For the season. over 46% of his shot attempts were threes, and his three point % was average (33%). It became much worse, against top opponents -- threes made up a ridiculous 54% of his attempts, and his % on threes was 28%. The fact that he would look to create against bad teams in the BE when Bazz was there, but against a good team just start settling and chucking is a poor sign.
Bazz did limit him alot, but he made no attempt to create against SU, Louisville, and Georgetown. The three games against Syracuse (which were all in the last quarter of the season) really hurt his rep, And yes I indeed watched those games very carefully. Playing a zone is an adverse situation. But to play a team three times over the span of three to four weeks and make no adjustments or changes to your game, is going to bother scouts. He simply was not moving out there. Against SU's 2-3, you can get 23-25 footers all game long off simple movement. Not a smart shot, but Lamb was content to take it. He made no effort to get to soft spots. Even Drummond was able to get soft spots against SU.
Don't shoot the messanger - it is not unexplainable why there is a negative buzz out there from some scouts. The above is the reason he fell in the eyes of NBA scouts. There are many valid excuses, and he also has the skillset to impress as you noted and move back up.