E-Balla wrote:DickGrayson wrote:Okafor doesn't display defensive potential.
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ugCbmikA_hE[/youtube]
he's 270lbs 6"11 but Gasol is massive at 7"1 and Gasol always displayed defensive prowess and ability to move his feet and have a feel for defense before he played in the NBA. Gasol averaged 6 blocks in high school. Okafor averaged around 2.
I addressed your whole post at first before deciding to delete it since it's mostly an opinion based argument (and I respect where you're coming from
I've been on the Towns bandwagon even back when most had him as barely top 5). For now I'll focus on this.
First off did you watch the video? If you did the video showed pretty clearly that he had a lot of potential. He does things very right just not consistently (which can also be said about every young player ever). How about this one:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFa_Dax54w0[/youtube]
Also in high school IDK where you got those numbers (I'm guessing maxpreps which only has the numbers of the games they saw but they divide by his total games played - I mean they also said he averaged 10 ppg) but as a freshman he averaged 7/4 with 2 blocks, 25/13 with 6 blocks as a sophomore, 21/9 with 3 blocks as a junior, and 24/11 with 5 blocks a night (I rounded down too because he averaged 5.7 iirc but I can only officially say and find 5.3).
Marc Gasol did average 6 blocks a game as a senior just like Jahlil but remember he wasn't seen as good coming into the league. He might be 7-1 but they're still the same size when you take Jahlil's massive wingspan into account. We don't know Marc's standing reach but using Roy Hibbert (who is 7-2 in sneakers with a 7-4 wingspan) as a base he has a 9-3.5 standing reach. Jahlil has a 7-5 wingspan and a 9-2.5 standing reach. A one inch difference when Jahlil is way more mobile isn't that big a difference. Marc averaged 1 block per game in Europe (and in the league only 1.6) and here's what people thought of his defense back then:
However, Gasol's great statistical production doesn't always necessarily reflect a dominating performance on the floor. Indeed, it didn't in this Copa. He wasn't really a go-to guy for Girona on the offensive end (mainly because of Real Madrid’s double-teaming defense, that's true), but especially he doesn't make a great impact on the defensive end. His limited mobility gets exploited in pick-and-roll situations that the opponents throw at him; he's not a great intimidator, he allows smaller opponents to shoot over him; and given his superb size, he's not the best rebounder around.
Here's a scouting report from his rookie season:
Much of what we documented about Gasol during his European career has held true during his rookie season in the NBA. Given his lack of vertical explosiveness and lateral quickness, he actually creates a surprising number of defensive turnovers (1.0 STLPG, 1.5 BLKPG); however, he still struggles whenever forced to guard perimeter oriented big men or the pick-and-roll. When guarding ball screens, the Grizzlies seem to hedge most frequently, which often results in Gasol getting caught outside of the three point arc and failing to rotate successfully back to his man. Gasol must improve upon his conditioning to improve his lateral quickness and pick-and-roll defense to avoid becoming a defensive liability moving forward. If he fails in this department and/or the Grizzlies don't improve their interior defense this offseason by surrounding him with more talent, we can expect to see Memphis continue their defensive struggles through another season.
In instances where Gasol is defending the interior, he holds his ground well, although he rarely makes highlight-reel defensive stops. Since he's a step slow, he's a victim of quick-footed bigs possessing great wheel or seal moves which pin him on the backside of the offensive player. And although he'll never really be the type of intimidating, explosive defender the Grizzlies desperately need, Gasol still shows good fundamentals to counter the offensive skill sets of more talented NBA players and keep them out of the lane.
Help side defense is the area in which Gasol must improve his defensive game the most. As we previously wrote, he often allows smaller defenders to shoot over him and lacks lateral quickness - both of which usually equate to subpar defense. Gasol also tends to play lackadaisically off the ball, rarely knocking down cutters and looking to aggressively box out on when shots goo up. If he improves on his work ethic and hustle, we should see him develop into a respectable NBA defender - particularly if he increases his tenacity against more athletic players. Being a member of a struggling defensive system like Memphis' certainly hurts Gasol's numbers, but the addition of another interior presence this offseason should help the team's defensive play.
There's a reason why after seeing him as a rookie they took that scrub Hasheem Thabeet 2nd. Every criticism I'm hearing about Jahlil sounds like the stuff we heard about Marc Gasol until he was 26 years old and he fixed his conditioning and mastered positional defense. Now he's a former DPOY. Tell me the bolded doesn't sound familiar...
With all that, they gave Gasol a projection into being able to impact Memphis' defense. I haven't seen any scouting report that gives Okafor the benefit of a doubt defensively expect in that video you posted. where they share a weakness video that doesn't look too different from his potential video.
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5W2FRzzb8i8[/youtube]
Okafor in both videos look like his feet are glued to the floor defensively. Even when he makes a stop, it's not timed. He gets by using his massive 7"6 wing span and his 9"3 reach. Okafor is a big boy and he has only shown to use his length to make stops. His timing is poor, but he can work on this and improve like most big men do in the NBA. I don't think Okafor is a finished product at all.
Gasol was still the more promising rookie than Okafor defensively, two different players.
He provided help defense and strong post defense, he shown flashes and his problems were a physical situation(conditioning, losing weight).
It wasn't a tendency, it wasn't an awareness issue or a feel for the game.
Okafor hasn't shown any tendency to be a tenacious defender on an inconsistent basis. Okafor just presents himself to be disinterested on the defensive end.
Defense: Has the length and strength to be effective on this end, but lacks the fundamentals and effort level to capitalize. Used to be extremely foul prone, but has learned to sacrifice points on the defensive end for the sole purpose of staying on the floor longer. Does a poor job defending the post, allowing defenders to back him down too often and outright giving up on plays. Will still fall for some fakes, but not as many as he used to. Fights for position, but not to the point that he could get called for a foul. Shows great timing and anticipation when contesting shots, but isn’t quite quick enough to be a major factor coming over from the weakside. Gets quite a few of his blocks on the ball. A liability when attempting to defend power forwards, which forces his team to play him as an undersized center. Needs to lose weight and improve his conditioning level to help in this regard. Struggles to hedge screens on the perimeter--doesn’t recover to his man very quickly. Is limited by the same characteristic when closing out shooters. Takes up too much space down low not to be a solid rebounder. Tremendous wingspan, hands and reflexes make him extremely productive on the glass. Has some tools defensively, but is still working to put them together on a more consistent basis.
From DraftExpress.com
http://www.draftexpress.com#ixzz3TutiACri
Al Jefferson scouting report. Current Al Jefferson also, not rookie Al Jefferson.
Better comparison than young Marc Gasol, much more accurate for Okafor.