fredericklove wrote:Ell Curry wrote:
If you can't create for others with the pick and roll, you're probably not going to be that efficient running it, unless you're a lights out scorer, and Barnes hasn't shot the ball consistently well enough like, say a Durant or Kevin Martin (both of whom had way higher TS%) did in college. That's why Derozan running the pick and roll wouldn't/doesn't win the Raptors games.
how is not creating for others w/ pnr end up labeled as inefficient with it? You're talking in a point guard emphasize where they need to use pnr to create for others, but for scores, you run pnr to lead a 2nd defender in, or to lead an oncoming screen to help you create a switch in defender to either get your iso with the mismatch advantage, or to mislead the defender so that you can get your space off. So really? You use the "create for others" in a wrong emphasize, don't make the same mistake next time.
You did this again, stop using Demar as example, using him isn't going to help explain why Barnes won't work well w/ pnr in the NBA, its totally different player with different game. Demar doesn't really know how to use pnr, and rarely uses it well.
And you using TS% to dictate Barnes' game, thats a waste of valuable time, we're talking about game style, using these type of stats in a college context w/ college system/ college style isn't going to relate anything to the NBA level., and especially you're using Durant's legendary college freshman season, Kevin Martin on the other hand is a phenomenal offensive player. Bringing up Durant, Martin, or a point guard mentality w/ pnr aren't ideal comparison on Barnes' case.
1. Whether or not you're a scorer, passing ability matters. I'm not sure why you think it doesn't for non-PG's when they are the ball handler in a pick and roll. Black holes are a bad thing. Players who can pass are a good thing, no matter what position they play.
2. I haven't seen any evidence that TS% doesn't correlate decently from college to pros. Look at this:
http://courtsideanalyst.wordpress.com/2 ... a-players/This post discusses "six players who I believed were “substantially similar” to Tobias Harris in terms of (1) height (6’7”.75) (2) weight (223) (3) reach (8’7”.5) and (4) strength (12 reps) and then examined how the college numbers produced by those players translated to the NBA.
The six players from the Draftexpress “Measurement History” files whom I believed were the most similar to Tobias Harris were: Carmelo Anthony, Damion James, Danny Granger, Caron Butler, Cartier Martin, and Jeff Green." Barnes is listed at 6'8, 223 and those SF's all seem like reasonable comparisons.
Their TS% translated similarly: "The six were also remarkably similar in their TS% decline, with each being around 14.6% less efficient in their rookie season than they were in college (Anthony being the outlier at 7.5%). Even if Barnes is a similar positive outlier and declines at the rate Anthony did (rather than at the worse rate the other 5/6 guys did) , he'll still post a true shooting percentage around .491. Here are the 10 NBA players who shot closest to that this season:
Jason Maxiell, DET
Steve Blake, LAL
D.J. Augustin, CHA
Daniel Gibson, CLE
Ekpe Udoh, GS/MIL
Joel Przybilla, POR
Manny Harris, CLE
Donte Greene, SAC
Raymond Felton, POR
C.J. Watson, CHI
Marreese Speights, MEM
That's a horrifying list. Again, Barnes is a 20 year old kid who was seen as an NBA superstar just 80 games ago. He could outperform his college stats, even. But that's an incredibly rare thing to do and a massive, massive risk for an organization to take at the 8th overall spot in a deep draft, right?