GMATCallahan wrote:Fan from Dade wrote:Chandler will be fine, its just a really ugly year that started off poorly after his hamstring pull. For a big like him that lingers. Add in chemistry issues and questionable coaching and you get inconsistent results. Also I'd call the guy averaging 20,5,4 an impact player. You guys are so quick to dismiss the start he and Bledsoe had when folks were calling them one of the best backcourts in the league. I think they are still that.
Both of their assists-to-turnover ratios are substandard for a playmaker, something that the media ignored. (But then, the NBA media is largely defined by ignorance.)
His assist to turnover ratio doesn't mean he isn't a good guard or an impact player. Guys is this league turn the ball over. Be nice if he reduced them but the turnovers also went up quite a bit as the injury got worse.
(By the way, hamstring injuries can linger for any player, regardless of size.)
Well thanks, I'm well aware. My point was that Chandler specifically relies on his athleticism to compete so it will likely impact him more. Depending on how you play, even if it lingers the impact can be very different.
Knight's "counting stats" averages in the three major categories look nice, but the question of "impact" is relative. Value largely derives from the ability to combine volume with efficiency, and Knight is an inefficient field goal shooter, an inefficient scorer, and an inefficient playmaker. He is not worthless, but he is not necessarily valuable, either. Frankly, there is a case to be made that Knight is essentially a "zero sum" player right now. The good news is that having just turned twenty-four, he remains young, maintaining a greater window for the future.
I could make the same case. Stack his numbers up; percentages (even though there is a sharp drop after the injury) included against most of the young guards in this league and you will see they are very close. Difference is those guys are considered great and Knight gets highlighter. I'd love to see all of them shoot a better percentage; truth is most guys that take lots of shots for their teams at the guard position shoot in the 42-44 range.
Kemba 42.3 36 from 3
Kyrie 46.4 29 from 3
Lillard 41.8 36 from 3
Westbrook 45.6 (highest of his career) 29 from 3
Lowry 42.5 and 39 from 3
Carter-Williams 41.8 and 29 from 3
Reggie Jackson 44.2 and 37 from 3
Knight 42.4 and 33 from 3
We could all pull stats that paint the picture that we want. Main stats will always be PPG, RBDS, and Assist. Not many players in this league average 20,5,and 4. Mind you these numbers dipped the past month and it can be correlated with an injury.
Fan from Dade wrote:He played for a month with a sports hernia; not sure many players would've done that.
I am not negating your point, but Kevin Johnson played four years with a [undiagnosed] sports hernia, including two sports hernias by the end of that time. And his hernias required surgery to heal properly, not just rest. Just saying ...
Knight's willingness to play through an injury is commendable enough, but it does not say anything about whether the Suns' roster is properly structured moving forward.
A sports hernia limits movement, burst, speed, leaping, shooting, everything. It creates sharp pains and Knight is on record saying it limited his game but he tried to play through it until he just couldn't. And yes it should at least say what type of player he is. In addition, I assure you the team knew he was playing hurt and they preferred him playing hurt to everything else on the roster.
Fan from Dade wrote:Tyson will give you great games and some poor games but Len is the future so I think the averages will work out; this year is just ugly.
I do not have a problem with Chandler, but given his age and mileage (he is in his fifteenth season), where is he going to be two or three years from now? The issue was always the length of the deal.