Ron Johnson wrote:You do not trade Butler under any circumstance. If his draft was held today, he'd be a lottery pick and he's on a great contract. He is elite at everything except scoring, and his numbers show that he would be elite at that if he would quit deferring to Deng (his role model) and Rose.
No offense, but this is a preposterous statement. Jimmy Butler is far from elite at really everything except maybe man defense. How is he elite at playmaking or even rebounding? Hell he's not even a particularly good ball handler or passer, merely OK. How do numbers show that he would be an elite scorer? Do you realize that you can't just increase attempts drastically and hope to maintain efficiency?
Here are his numbers this year:
Min Pts DRB ORB REB AST TO BLK STl PF
Average SG 331 21.9 4.6 1.0 5.7 4.2 2.9 .4 1.6 3.3
Butler 268 15.2 5.7 2.0 7.7 2.7 2.1 1.3 2.9 1.6
Shooting Efficiency
FG% 2FG% 3FG% FT% eFG% TS% FGA 3FGA PPS FTA
Average SG 43.2 45.7 38.6 78.1 50.0 54.3 18.1 6.4 1.21 4.6
Butler 43.5 46.5 38.5 86.1 50.7 59.5 12.4 4.7 1.46 6.4
Numbers (per 48 minutes) are from NBA Geek and are updated everyday. Avg numbers are for players with more than 130 minutes this year. What all this means is that he should be taking more shots and have more plays called for him. His points per shot and ability to get to the free throw line make him a very good offensive player. People need to drop the yay points way of looking at players, or you'll end up with a team like the Knicks.
The reason Jimmy's efficiency is pretty good is that he doesn't shoot very much. He doesn't have a lot of offensive ability which is why he's our 4th option among the starters. Last year, when he had plenty of opportunity, he scored at a very low rate also. I like Jimmy but there is a reason he was passed over by pretty much every team.