tontoz wrote:Dat2U wrote:tontoz wrote:Faried was a senior. Many of the players drafted are underclassmen. And a lot of them are scrubs that rarely see the court.
Are you really trying to say that 225 is the ideal weight for a pf?
Faried gets pushed around routinely by opposing bigs, as he did against the Wizards. His man D suffers as a result.
Don't put words in mouth. The bulk of the discussion had to do with his perceived lack of height/length.
Does Faried only being 225 lbs stop him from being a very productive NBA player???
So I am putting words in your mouth now?
Dat2U wrote:Undersized only in height.
I had already mentioned that Faried weighed only 225 at the combine when you made this post, light for a 4. Either you were not aware that a players bulk is important to play the 4, or you were just ignoring Faried's lack thereof. Take your pick.
And yes his lack of bulk does hurt him, especially on the defensive end which you and many others keep harping on with Bennett.
you guys are getting it confused, just because you have bulk doesn't mean you have above average lower body strength.
the real question is, does faried have above average lower body strength for a powerforward. When he battles with another player who has above average lower body strength, who normally wins. It's usually easy to see when to player are fighting for rebounding position, who has the superior lower body strength. It has alot to do with leverage. Javale McGee had absolutely horrible lower body strength. Seraphin, even though he is bulky, has very poor lower body strength and leverage ability while fighting for rebounds. Lower body strength involves using your hips to push other big bodies off key spots in the paint, knocking guys off balance just as they are about to jump for a rebound and your ability to hold off others with your lower body and Jump for a rebound at the same time quickly in response to reading a basketball carom path.
Lower body strength, reaction speed, and hand size. With lower body strength being the most important, and hand size being important but the least important of the three.
that's how you should evaluate bigs like faried, not look at how much they weigh. What evidence did they show before coming to the nba that they excelled in these areas against other strong lower body bigmen.
Watching Tim Duncan win the rebounding battle against Zach Randolph, two bigs who have are above average lower body strength bigs. Just look at when Faried went toe toe with another top rebounder and visually see who wins the battle. Then you can tell if Faried has above average lower body strength.
I look at Noel versus Steven adams and I can tell you adams has superior lower body strength. Visual evidence is the best way to evaluate.
Build your team w/5 shooters using P. Pierce Form deeply bent hips and lower back arch at same time b4 rising into shot. Elbow never pointing to the ground! Good teams have an engine player that shoot volume (2000 full season) at 50 percent.Large Hands