keynote wrote:Morris is a dumb player.
Since when did he become a starter for the Wizards?
Moderators: LyricalRico, nate33, montestewart
keynote wrote:Morris is a dumb player.
CobraCommander wrote:nate33 wrote:LOL. Totally missed the game. Good choice.
Beal played well, huh?
At this point, the more bad games for Beal, the better. We need the league to know the truth about him, that he's a decent (and injury prone) starting SG and nothing more. A max contract is absurd.
Beal played and didn't get hurt...that's a WIN
nate33 wrote:I'm a little puzzled at all of the Morris hate. If you ignore his first four games, Morris has been a pretty solid player for us. Since then, he has averaged 17.7 points, 8.3 boards, 2.0 assists, 1.3 steals and 1 block per 36 minutes with a TS% of .575 and a 3P% of .361. He has also played pretty good defense. The team is holds the opponent to 5.6 fewer points per 100 possessions with Morris on the floor, and Morris' total on/off differential is +7.2.
I'd like to see a little better rebounding, but other than that, he is doing real well.
TheSecretWeapon wrote:nate33 wrote:I'm a little puzzled at all of the Morris hate. If you ignore his first four games, Morris has been a pretty solid player for us. Since then, he has averaged 17.7 points, 8.3 boards, 2.0 assists, 1.3 steals and 1 block per 36 minutes with a TS% of .575 and a 3P% of .361. He has also played pretty good defense. The team is holds the opponent to 5.6 fewer points per 100 possessions with Morris on the floor, and Morris' total on/off differential is +7.2.
I'd like to see a little better rebounding, but other than that, he is doing real well.
He's doing about as well as could be reasonably expected. His overall efficiency is meh (103). I wouldn't put much stock in the on/off stuff yet -- he's at 629 total minutes, which is a minuscule sample size in on/off world. Most of that on/off is on the defensive end. In my stuff, he rates as basically an average defender, which is an upgrade on Dudley who rates well-below average defensively.
Overall, he's been a little better than average after those first four games.
nate33 wrote:TheSecretWeapon wrote:nate33 wrote:I'm a little puzzled at all of the Morris hate. If you ignore his first four games, Morris has been a pretty solid player for us. Since then, he has averaged 17.7 points, 8.3 boards, 2.0 assists, 1.3 steals and 1 block per 36 minutes with a TS% of .575 and a 3P% of .361. He has also played pretty good defense. The team is holds the opponent to 5.6 fewer points per 100 possessions with Morris on the floor, and Morris' total on/off differential is +7.2.
I'd like to see a little better rebounding, but other than that, he is doing real well.
He's doing about as well as could be reasonably expected. His overall efficiency is meh (103). I wouldn't put much stock in the on/off stuff yet -- he's at 629 total minutes, which is a minuscule sample size in on/off world. Most of that on/off is on the defensive end. In my stuff, he rates as basically an average defender, which is an upgrade on Dudley who rates well-below average defensively.
Overall, he's been a little better than average after those first four games.
Just a side note, I want to rescind my criticism of his rebounding. When you look at the numbers, you see that power forward rebounding rate has dropped quite a bit these last few years. A quick glance at the leaders and I note that only 3 full-time power forwards average double-digit rebounding per 36 minutes: Faried, Julius Randle and Trevor Booker. A couple other guys like Kevin Love, Ed Davis, Tristan Thompson and Jared Sullinger also average double figures, but they play a lot of center as well. I guess with 4-out sets now being the norm, "power forwards" are out defending the perimeter almost as often as small forwards are, so there's no reason to expect them to average significantly more rebounds than a typical small forward.
TheSecretWeapon wrote:nate33 wrote:TheSecretWeapon wrote:He's doing about as well as could be reasonably expected. His overall efficiency is meh (103). I wouldn't put much stock in the on/off stuff yet -- he's at 629 total minutes, which is a minuscule sample size in on/off world. Most of that on/off is on the defensive end. In my stuff, he rates as basically an average defender, which is an upgrade on Dudley who rates well-below average defensively.
Overall, he's been a little better than average after those first four games.
Just a side note, I want to rescind my criticism of his rebounding. When you look at the numbers, you see that power forward rebounding rate has dropped quite a bit these last few years. A quick glance at the leaders and I note that only 3 full-time power forwards average double-digit rebounding per 36 minutes: Faried, Julius Randle and Trevor Booker. A couple other guys like Kevin Love, Ed Davis, Tristan Thompson and Jared Sullinger also average double figures, but they play a lot of center as well. I guess with 4-out sets now being the norm, "power forwards" are out defending the perimeter almost as often as small forwards are, so there's no reason to expect them to average significantly more rebounds than a typical small forward.
I wouldn't rescind. Morris' rebounding is below average for PFs.
Ruzious wrote:CobraCommander wrote:nate33 wrote:LOL. Totally missed the game. Good choice.
Beal played well, huh?
At this point, the more bad games for Beal, the better. We need the league to know the truth about him, that he's a decent (and injury prone) starting SG and nothing more. A max contract is absurd.
Beal played and didn't get hurt...that's a WIN
Such high standards.![]()
2 for 16 especially against a team with mediocre to poor defensive 2's... And wasn't Beal the player who complained a couple days ago about his teammates' efforts? What the bleep is wrong with him?