Governor Dudley wrote:Two weeks ago I was team Russell
Last week I was team OK4
This week I'm team Towns
Next week I'm gonna be back on the OK4 team
Damn bro, you're doing more waffling than IHOP
Moderators: j4remi, NoLayupRule, HerSports85, GONYK, Jeff Van Gully, dakomish23, Deeeez Knicks, mpharris36
Governor Dudley wrote:Two weeks ago I was team Russell
Last week I was team OK4
This week I'm team Towns
Next week I'm gonna be back on the OK4 team

LJ4pointplay wrote:Genuinely curious why there is a belief that Towns is "raw" and needs time to develop? Seems to me like he is already extremely skilled. Maybe he doesn't have post repertoire of Okafor, but he is far from inept there, and also can contribute on the offensive end immediately with his shooting and passing.
TrueWarrior wrote:LJ4pointplay wrote:Genuinely curious why there is a belief that Towns is "raw" and needs time to develop? Seems to me like he is already extremely skilled. Maybe he doesn't have post repertoire of Okafor, but he is far from inept there, and also can contribute on the offensive end immediately with his shooting and passing.
Some people make it seem like Towns is another Tyson. They are just comparing his post game to Jah so it looks basic, which it is, but its already better than Tyson's ever was. Centers like Tyson can get 10+ ppg on junk baskets alone. You add Towns' post work, shooting, and passing and theres no reason he cant get to 20 ppg and 3-4 apg in a few years.
For a 19 year old center Towns is far from raw, and hes already pretty big at 250 pounds. His per minute and advanced stats are almost identical to the great NBA centers in college at the same stage, and hes barely a focal point on offense. People just think hes raw because he only plays 20-25 mpg and isnt being force fed every possession like Jah is.
Towns can come in and help this team right away across the board. Jah will help with scoring in the beginning but who knows about the other end. With Melo here we'd just have to believe Jah will concentrate on his all around game more, but I'd rather have what Towns brings now and in the future.
E-Balla wrote:TrueWarrior wrote:LJ4pointplay wrote:Genuinely curious why there is a belief that Towns is "raw" and needs time to develop? Seems to me like he is already extremely skilled. Maybe he doesn't have post repertoire of Okafor, but he is far from inept there, and also can contribute on the offensive end immediately with his shooting and passing.
Some people make it seem like Towns is another Tyson. They are just comparing his post game to Jah so it looks basic, which it is, but its already better than Tyson's ever was. Centers like Tyson can get 10+ ppg on junk baskets alone. You add Towns' post work, shooting, and passing and theres no reason he cant get to 20 ppg and 3-4 apg in a few years.
For a 19 year old center Towns is far from raw, and hes already pretty big at 250 pounds. His per minute and advanced stats are almost identical to the great NBA centers in college at the same stage, and hes barely a focal point on offense. People just think hes raw because he only plays 20-25 mpg and isnt being force fed every possession like Jah is.
Towns can come in and help this team right away across the board. Jah will help with scoring in the beginning but who knows about the other end. With Melo here we'd just have to believe Jah will concentrate on his all around game more, but I'd rather have what Towns brings now and in the future.
People aren't confident in Towns' post game because he hasn't shown it off against good competition at all. Other than his owning of Jon Horford all of his best games are against tiny teams. Imma run through all the teams he had 10+ against. Georgia has no players over 6-8, Auburn has no rotation players over 6-8, Eastern Kentucky has no players over 6-7, Texas-Arlington wasn't playing their only 6-10 player at the time the two teams met, Mizzou had one 6-10 player in their rotation but they're one of the worst teams in college ball and they were blown out so fast Towns didn't touch the floor with him(9-23, 3-15 in conference), and Ole Miss has no players over 6-9.
Of the remaining teams there's LSU, Louisville, Texas, Florida, and Providence. Like I said before he owns Jon Horford (Florida) and those were legit games against an NBA sized big where he looked good and he was a combined 15-30 (.500) which still isn't that amazing. Providence also has a 7-0 rotation player and Towns played him well offensively (that's actually one of the few games where he looked bad on D though). Against LSU, Louisville, and Texas he was under 50% from the field and a combined 11/25 (44%).
I'll need to see him play well against someone other than (his former teammate and practice buddy) Jon Horford and maybe I'll believe he can post up effectively in the league.
TrueWarrior wrote:E-Balla wrote:TrueWarrior wrote:
Some people make it seem like Towns is another Tyson. They are just comparing his post game to Jah so it looks basic, which it is, but its already better than Tyson's ever was. Centers like Tyson can get 10+ ppg on junk baskets alone. You add Towns' post work, shooting, and passing and theres no reason he cant get to 20 ppg and 3-4 apg in a few years.
For a 19 year old center Towns is far from raw, and hes already pretty big at 250 pounds. His per minute and advanced stats are almost identical to the great NBA centers in college at the same stage, and hes barely a focal point on offense. People just think hes raw because he only plays 20-25 mpg and isnt being force fed every possession like Jah is.
Towns can come in and help this team right away across the board. Jah will help with scoring in the beginning but who knows about the other end. With Melo here we'd just have to believe Jah will concentrate on his all around game more, but I'd rather have what Towns brings now and in the future.
People aren't confident in Towns' post game because he hasn't shown it off against good competition at all. Other than his owning of Jon Horford all of his best games are against tiny teams. Imma run through all the teams he had 10+ against. Georgia has no players over 6-8, Auburn has no rotation players over 6-8, Eastern Kentucky has no players over 6-7, Texas-Arlington wasn't playing their only 6-10 player at the time the two teams met, Mizzou had one 6-10 player in their rotation but they're one of the worst teams in college ball and they were blown out so fast Towns didn't touch the floor with him(9-23, 3-15 in conference), and Ole Miss has no players over 6-9.
Of the remaining teams there's LSU, Louisville, Texas, Florida, and Providence. Like I said before he owns Jon Horford (Florida) and those were legit games against an NBA sized big where he looked good and he was a combined 15-30 (.500) which still isn't that amazing. Providence also has a 7-0 rotation player and Towns played him well offensively (that's actually one of the few games where he looked bad on D though). Against LSU, Louisville, and Texas he was under 50% from the field and a combined 11/25 (44%).
I'll need to see him play well against someone other than (his former teammate and practice buddy) Jon Horford and maybe I'll believe he can post up effectively in the league.
Good post. I didnt watch all those games you mentioned, but its hard to judge Towns that way because hes not featured like Jah is. I dont know what type of shots those were or if his team even needed him to dominate. Kentucky is just a weird team to evaluate players individually. Most of those games were in the beginning of the season when he was still finding his way too, so the tourney should tell us more.
Towns plays Bobby Portis today who is an NBA player even if they dont get matched up. Im not worried about his post game because seriously guys like Cole and Amundson score in the post for us. Once Towns adds a little more beef to his britches he'll be fine, especially when teams need to play the threat of his jumper.
One more thing Ill add. Playing with WCS and Lyles might be good for Towns on defense with all that size, but offensively their spacing seems a little suspect. If Towns played in a 4 out offense like Jah he'd have more room to operate. Whenever I watch him it seems like the lane is always clogged up.
E-Balla wrote:TrueWarrior wrote:E-Balla wrote:People aren't confident in Towns' post game because he hasn't shown it off against good competition at all. Other than his owning of Jon Horford all of his best games are against tiny teams. Imma run through all the teams he had 10+ against. Georgia has no players over 6-8, Auburn has no rotation players over 6-8, Eastern Kentucky has no players over 6-7, Texas-Arlington wasn't playing their only 6-10 player at the time the two teams met, Mizzou had one 6-10 player in their rotation but they're one of the worst teams in college ball and they were blown out so fast Towns didn't touch the floor with him(9-23, 3-15 in conference), and Ole Miss has no players over 6-9.
Of the remaining teams there's LSU, Louisville, Texas, Florida, and Providence. Like I said before he owns Jon Horford (Florida) and those were legit games against an NBA sized big where he looked good and he was a combined 15-30 (.500) which still isn't that amazing. Providence also has a 7-0 rotation player and Towns played him well offensively (that's actually one of the few games where he looked bad on D though). Against LSU, Louisville, and Texas he was under 50% from the field and a combined 11/25 (44%).
I'll need to see him play well against someone other than (his former teammate and practice buddy) Jon Horford and maybe I'll believe he can post up effectively in the league.
Good post. I didnt watch all those games you mentioned, but its hard to judge Towns that way because hes not featured like Jah is. I dont know what type of shots those were or if his team even needed him to dominate. Kentucky is just a weird team to evaluate players individually. Most of those games were in the beginning of the season when he was still finding his way too, so the tourney should tell us more.
Towns plays Bobby Portis today who is an NBA player even if they dont get matched up. Im not worried about his post game because seriously guys like Cole and Amundson score in the post for us. Once Towns adds a little more beef to his britches he'll be fine, especially when teams need to play the threat of his jumper.
One more thing Ill add. Playing with WCS and Lyles might be good for Towns on defense with all that size, but offensively their spacing seems a little suspect. If Towns played in a 4 out offense like Jah he'd have more room to operate. Whenever I watch him it seems like the lane is always clogged up.
Seriously? Both of those guys are terrible in the post. Cole is 38% on post ups (overall he's in the 22nd percentile) and Lou is in the 40th percentile both while having low attempts.
Now I agree that they have a ton of other options but if he was NBA level down low they wouldn't keep the ball from him when he played NBA sized bigs and he wouldn't underperforming against them as much as he does.
Not saying he can't improve but his NBA readyness right now is basically as a PNR option where he can get a running start towards the rim (for those athletic dunks), make the next pass to the open man, and hit jumpers from every spot on the floor. Outside of that and garbage buckets I don't see him contributing much offensively until he improves.
And you would be right in saying he plays in a clogged lane unlike Okafor is Okafor wasn't public enemy number one and getting constant double teams but yes he could be more effective with a team around him that can shoot.

NYKnicksTAPE wrote:What's your opinion on Russell? Do u think his game will translate to the NBA? I'd be ecstatic if the Knicks drafted him to run the triangle offense.
E-Balla wrote:NYKnicksTAPE wrote:What's your opinion on Russell? Do u think his game will translate to the NBA? I'd be ecstatic if the Knicks drafted him to run the triangle offense.
He's a star. I get that he's way weaker than all other players with similar skills but he just makes his shots and can create. I never bet against anyone with an elite jumper, great handles, and great vision.


blanko wrote:I don't think we could go wrong either way. Okafor will be a scoring maching in the post even in the nba, the guy is just to big and skilled. He reminds me of Brad Daughterly. We put Okafor with a defensive beast with carmelo and that would be great, we put towns with another player and melo that would be great also.
Ron Mexico wrote:blanko wrote:I don't think we could go wrong either way. Okafor will be a scoring maching in the post even in the nba, the guy is just to big and skilled. He reminds me of Brad Daughterly. We put Okafor with a defensive beast with carmelo and that would be great, we put towns with another player and melo that would be great also.
brad daugherty. good call. offensively, both were big and crafty. similar frames.

E-Balla wrote:Ron Mexico wrote:blanko wrote:I don't think we could go wrong either way. Okafor will be a scoring maching in the post even in the nba, the guy is just to big and skilled. He reminds me of Brad Daughterly. We put Okafor with a defensive beast with carmelo and that would be great, we put towns with another player and melo that would be great also.
brad daugherty. good call. offensively, both were big and crafty. similar frames.
But Brad was soft, had a jumper, and could pass extremely well. If anything Towns is like Brad offensively.
NYKnickerbocker wrote:waya wrote:DickGrayson wrote:Anyone find it hard for Towns to love the Knicks? I know Knicks are his local team, but most kids his age aren't even Knick fans because Knicks been so terrible the last 10-15 years. I figure most 16-20 years gave up on the Knicks. If Towns is a Knicks fan, props to him.
We ourselves know how draining following this team is.
Maybe his pops is a Knick fan
That's the reason I'm a knicks fan