RexBoyWonder wrote:EddieJonesFan wrote:Standing reach, duh. Bigs need to defend laterally as well, but defending vertically is far more relevant to the jobs of bigs, and reach is far more directly relevant to rebounding, shot blocking, and scoring inside than wingspan is. If I had to judge a player with only one measurement, I'd choose standing reach. I hate how people ignore it so much.
It makes sense in theory but Antony Davis is a living proof that's not always the case, Best shotblocker in the NBA with a 9"0 standing reach and a 7"5.5 wingspan. Andre Drummond shows the same point, huge wingspan big being super effective despite below average standing reach. The idea that they were measured differently just for that 1 draft seems odd.
I'd agree, but the standing reach measurements were extremely odd for numerous players in that draft.
It is almost impossible that Davis' standing reach is only 9' 0". The average standing reach in the DX database for players at his height (barefoot) is 8'11.5" and he has 4.5 inches in wingspan over the average at his height.
Here is an example. Larry Sanders and Davis both measured 6' 9.25" barefoot, 6' 10.5" in shoes, 222 lbs. Their wingspans were also almost identical with sanders being 1/4 inch longer at 7' 5.75" compared to 7' 5.5" for Davis. Sanders measured with an expected exceptional standing reach of 9' 4". Davis measured with a very average 9' 0".
If you want to look at a guy with a bigger frame, Howard measured 6' 9" with a 7' 4.5" wingspan and a standing reach of 9' 3.5" So .25 shorter, 1 inch less in wingspan, but 3.5 inches more in reach despite his wide shoulders.



