Knightlife wrote:
Fair enough, I have been completely under the impression that usage rate also takes into account assists numbers; which would be intuitive.
But most of my point stands. Jason Smith is a largely limited player who only really scores in a single way- long twos. Look at his shot chart for the year: 63 FGA at the rim, 285 FGA from 16 feet out. Regardless of who else is on the floor, he has no business being allowed to shoot as often as he does. I can think of several bench players who would provide much better offense, one of whom is Hezonja. If you were to allow Hezonja to actually dictate the offense for even just 5 minutes a game, I think you would be wowed by the results not only with the team, but also in Hezonja's personal development.
But that'll never happen because he's in Skiles' dog pound simply for being a rookie.
Rookie has nothing to do with it. It has to do with Mario being raw and not being better than other players in front of him. The myth of Skiles not playing rookies or young players has been debunked a thousand times with statistical facts on this forum. It is not true.
Mario was absolutely not prepared to defend in the NBA day 1. If you look at video of him defending in the first few months, you will see he was not only totally out of sync with the entire defensive rotations, but he didn't even have the right body positioning. He would be standing upright out of a defensive stance and never raised his arms. He was totally unsustainable on the defensive end.
If you look at him now, he is in the right body positioning and he grinds it out on the defensive end. There is a clearly noticeable difference. He got that from being held accountable. Of course he still has a long way to go on that end to be considered more than an average defender, but at least now he has the basic body positioning and intensity on defense that allows him minutes on the floor.
As far as Skiles giving him just 5 minutes to dictate the game, well he does with the second unit - more than anyone except the point guards...and that number has increased gradually and even more so since the Harris trade:

Also, its not as if Mario has been lighting it up. Especially after the trade with an increased role and opportunities.
Season:42.1 FG%
33.7 3PT%
49.9 eFG%
52.7 TS%
Post Trade:40.6 FG%
29.5 3PT%
47.4 eFG%
48.6 TS%