Dat2U wrote:Paul George doesn't have Otto Porter's IQ or feel for the game. Porter makes great decisions with the ball time after time. George seems like a hot & cold player to me. He has great moments with long stretches of invisibility. George is a good player but he's overrated because he can't consistently maintain those high stretches of play. George improved his skill once he got to the NBA. Porter is much further along skill wise coming into the league than George was. I think a lot of people are sleeping on Porter. He's about as rock solid SF prospect seen in a few years. He's got a chance to be better than George, Hayward & Leonard who outside of Kevin Durant, represent the best of the young SFs out there.
George is a Pippen. The Pippen comparison gets thrown around a lot but I think George is the closest thing we've seen to Pippen since Pippen. He's not suited to being
the guy for a franchise, definitely not on offense as the go to scorer. He's not that leader, not that scorer. He thinks too much and doesn't do. He passes over good shots to dribble into bad shots. He makes the wrong decisions with the ball as a scorer more than you like. And you're right that he does disappear and lose his aggressiveness on offense.
He is, however, a fantastic set up man and an elite wing defender that can do everything else well. He's an ideal glue man and second banana IMO. But he needs a Jordan. Indy needs that leader and that offensive player, among other things. This postseason, Hibbert became that kind of leader, and he was aggressive and dominant. And as a result, Indy suddenly looked really damn good, dominated the 2 seed, and took a 66 win team with a 27 game win streak to the wire, matching their level of play almost to the end.
I do think Porter can be "the guy" for an excellent team. That's what he was for GTown this year and he really elevated the team on his own. That team was not that great behind him. Not as loaded as UCLA, Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan, Duke, and Kansas were. Maybe not quite as talented as UNLV either. Though UNLV had trouble getting all of it's best players on the court at the same time. Anyway, Porter has the natural scoring instincts and skill level to shoulder the load for an offense. Only he doesn't have to shot jack to get his looks, they come for him within the offensive flow. He's some got work to do to fill out his skill set, mostly off the dribble. But it's stuff he can definitely improve in time.
I'd take Porter second. A SF that can score and rebound and guard multiple positions is one of the most valuable players in the game. His offensive skill set pairs perfectly with Wall. You can trust him to make good decisions immediately. I think we've been a bit spoiled by Beal's offensive IQ this year. He doesn't take bad shots or make bad choices. Porter and then maybe Zeller are the guys who can come in and be the same way as rookies.