SaiCLE wrote:Two of his turnovers came from jump ball situations, Don't believe me watch the game. He would have 4 assists if some of the players he passed to actually made their shots, He got blocked so what? He attacked the rim like crazy that game and missed a few easy bunnies that should have been fouls, No problem he's a rookie he'll get better....what else?
Not to take anything away from Waiters, but I think these excuses are cop outs.
Take, for example, the assist argument. I hear this one quite often, but it is absolutely meaningless. Every single NBA player has to deal with other players missing shots. If every player made every shot they were assisted on, then most NBA players would easily average 3-4 assists a game, if not more, and PG's would be getting like 15-20. It is part of the game that players miss shots, and you cannot arbitrarily add IMAGINARY assists to a favorite player and use that number to compare against REAL assist numbers.
We can expand this same argument to your claim about missed shots and turnovers. If you subtract a couple turnovers from Waiters total, because they were silly, you cannot compare that new value against real turnover results, because all players are charged with silly turnovers from time to time. It is part of the game. All players sometimes miss a shot because of an uncalled foul, it is part of the game. To compare players, you have to judge them by the same metrics.
Particularly, I have seen similar arguments advanced among other Blazer fans. Several times they have said "Lillard would have X number of assists if his teammates shots were falling". Well again, just like with Waiters, that X value is completely meaningless, because if that metric was used for all other PG's, his actual assist total would remain unremarkable. Maybe Lillard (or Waiters) didn't find his teammates in as good as position as a player actually averaging X assists, so to compare the two is a cop out.
Now, again, I want to stress I am not trying to say Waiters had a bad game. I did not see, but to have a rookie attack the basket and find success, even with some lumps thrown in, is very promising. Those lumps are expected of rookies, and it is entirely fair to argue that certain numbers will improve. However, I do see these type of excuses pretty often, and it is intellectually dishonest.