tsherkin wrote:Ayt wrote:So Paul George is a poor scorer in general compared to your typical NBA player. That is a fascinating position.
Don't be obtuse, it cheapens the discussion.
Normally I would let this go, but you are being ridiculous. I'm the one being obtuse and cheapening the discussing? I questioned a statement you made and gave you the chance to elaborate so that I could better understand your position.
Ayt wrote:tsherkin wrote:DeenNY31 wrote:i dont think hes overrated. He's a very good defensive player and is a solid scorer who will get better
He's a good defender and rebounder, plus he's an underrated passer.
He is, however, a poor scorer. He's got a 3pt shot and when he does get to the rim (which is not that often), he finishes there at an average rate. He's totally useless in the key, has a bad mid-range jumper and a below-average perimeter 2 beyond 15 feet, plus he doesn't draw fouls well. He's been horrendously inconsistent because of the volume of 3s he shoots, and he's trending upwards in 3pt shooting volume, which is not a good thing.
George is not a good scorer and thus he's best featured more as a secondary or tertiary player. He's sort of like a sane Artest with superior physical tools... as a first option, well, it's not a surprise Indy sucks on O. He's not alone in developing that problem, I mean obviously Hibbert and others factor in prominently, but yeah, George is not a good first option.
I don't see how that can be justified without caveats.
Okay, so I clarify my question to allow you to better state your position.
tsherkin wrote:Ayt wrote:He's a poor scorer compared to your typical NBA player, or he's a poor scorer as 1st or 2nd option? That is what I meant. Stating he's a poor scorer outright doesn't make any sense.
He's a poor scorer in general, but he's an AWFUL first option scorer.
He has basically one noteworthy scoring skill, the 3pt shot. That makes him a supplementary scorer, not a focal scorer. He's at or below average in most respects as a scorer. I listed several major traits and areas of focus earlier to highlight this point.
On a team as bad offensively as the Pacers, there is utility to having SOMEONE who is willing to hoist shots, right, so it's not like he's hurting Indiana as they are presently composed too much. They could try a few different things, but ultimately, they lack any kind of serious focal offensive talent. Obviously, my discussion here (and in other threads pertaining to George) centers around the idea that he's a first option scorer.
Debate otherwise is mostly irrelevant; if he was reduced to a guy who spotted up from 3, moved around screens for 3pt shots, cut to the hoop and otherwise attacked in transition, he'd look a lot better. That's a complementary scorer, though, not a guy who should be asked to shoulder a significant volume, nor to generate unassisted shots with any frequency.
And now you want to call me obtuse for not realizing that what you really meant was (
Obviously, if you're to compare him to some 15 mpg player or some end-of-bench guy, then yes, he's got superior scoring talent. But that's immaterial to this discussion and is a red herring designed to move the conversation in a direction that favors Paul George, even if it is in a meaningless light.
Compared to starting caliber perimeter scorers, he's not an impressive talent. His handles are really unimpressive, his post game isn't impressive and outside of transition, his utility is remarkably mediocre. Literally the only compelling elements of his offensive game are his passing ability and his 3pt shooting, the former of which is off-set by his turnover problems which, like his efficiency dip, have increased as his offensive load has grown.
"Good scorer" is never meant to mean "better than your average specialist," it's always meant to describe a player compared to his peers in similar roles.
Meantime, you're talking about a player who produces a 96 ORTG on +0.1% TS over league average and really bad consistency, which makes him a terrible option as a primary scoring threat and given his usage, not a terribly good option to begin with, regardless of whether he's first or second in line. As I said earlier, if his usage patterns were changed to those of a specialist three-point shooter who could run out in transition, his efficiency and his utility would dramatically increase. Obviously, Indy doesn't really have that luxury, but that's the case here, the talent doesn't match the role. He doesn't have the tools to make of himself a credible isolation threat, nor any meaningful utility when shouldering a significant scoring load.
I'm about as obtuse as you are brief and concise.











