Illuminaire wrote:Quick note: Sorry for getting snippy last post. I do that when I'm tired, and it's a personal failing.
Ok, back to discussion. Your last point is interesting, but strikes me as flawed. It seems like you are saying that Wall should not get credit for his scoring volume/efficiency because his skillset makes it easier to get off decent shots. That's a meaningless point to make, because skills that allow one to get off better shots are necessarily part of being a scorer by any reasonable definition.
Second, you bring up the team context. OK? The Wizards are not an offensive power house, so it's not as if pace or scheme are making a huge impact in Wall's production. If you truly believe that is the case please show some evidence for it. I will retort that when it comes to spacing, Wall is as much a creator of it as a beneficiary - both Webster and Ariza have had career shooting years playing with Wall. To me, that says a great deal about which effect is the chicken and which is the egg.
Lastly I will respond to the first two arguments from your last post:
1. Trends matter. One is trending up, the other is trending down. It's fair to argue whether those trends will continue and where they will end up, but most of us here are talking about the present. I do believe in informing ourselves in the now based on past context. In Irving's case he played poorly the second half of last season as well, while in Wall's case he played very well in the second half.
Injuries may be the determining factor in both cases. I'm quite open to that argument. I think you should be more open to the possibility that Irving's constant injuries are having a cumulative negative effect on his game; it's happened before.
2. You mean other than March 2013? That's when John scored 22pts/game on .484 shooting and earned 7.1 trips to the FT line per game. (He also shot .455 from three point range, though he didn't take nearly the volume that Irving does.)
When Wall had to take more shots in April (due to injured teammates) his shooting percentage dipped, but he scored 24pts/game on similar overall efficiency by getting to the free throw line almost nine times a game.
So yes, I would say they have had comparable stretches in their career.
I figured you were going to bring up the March 2013 stretch. I don't think it's comparable to the month Irving just had STRICTLY talking about scoring. Wall was shooting well and getting to the line a lot, but Irving in December averaged more points than Wall ever has (at 26ppg) and more importantly, was much better from beyond the arc.
I agree with all of your praise about Wall, but personally I am simply not going to give him a pass by pretending he's as refined a scorer as Kyrie Irving. I'm not just talking about stats (even though I brought up stats from Irving's first two seasons clearly showing him to be a superior scorer, which didn't seem to matter to you).. I'm talking about a player's on-court, actual skillset and the ease/variety with which they are able to score the basketball.
Just go on Youtube and watch any one of Irving's extensive highlight videos, he displays a scoring skillset that is obviously beyond what Wall has shown us to this point. He can shoot the three, finish at the rim, shoot off the dribble, and even has some effective post moves against smaller defenders. If your opinion from watching Irving and Wall play (and reviewing the stats) is that they are 'comparable' scorers.. I'd have to question whether your bias is playing into your assessment.
Even though Wall is on my favorite team and I want him to do well, I can respect skill when I see it, and Irving clearly has a preternatural level of skill as a scorer for his age. There's nothing wrong with acknowledging that. Becoming a great scorer takes work. A lot of it. Kyrie Irving has clearly put in an obsessive amount of work on his scoring skillset from a very young age, and it has resulted in him becoming a great scorer at the highest level of basketball.
John coming back after one summer and being able to make elbow jumpers at a league average rate doesn't make him a refined scorer. He has a long way to go, and I think we're cheating ourselves as basketball fans by not respecting the process it will take him to get there. He has a lot of work to do on his three-point shooting, becoming more crafty off the dribble, etc before I'd call him an equal scorer to Irving. Just my opinion.
The one thing we can agree on is that John is making a lot of progress as a scorer, and it's extremely encouraging
