Quotatious wrote:Man, Wiggins' ability to draw fouls is just phenomenal, for his age it's once-in-a-generation type of ability in this regard. I know the Lakers are not a great team, but you can't tell me that a guy who puts up 47 points with 20+ FTA against ANYBODY at age 21, doesn't have superstar ceiling. His all-around game is very much work-in-progress, but he's already a special scorer.
Mmmm. Single game, weak defensive team. Wonderful performance. I don't think a single game really speaks to the breadth of potential you're discussing here. Wiggins IS very good at drawing fouls, this we already knew. He's been at or above .400 in both of his previous seasons. I think "once in a generation" is extreme hyperbole, however, if only because he's not doing anything we haven't seen before in the past dozen years or so. Yes, he's young, but I mean, it was just in 2009-10 when Harden hit the league as a 20 year-old at .415 FTr, and then .501 just the next season at age 21. Yes, not in a primary scoring role because he was still on OKC, but he hasn't been under .518 FTr since his second season. Even after the Lakers game, Wiggins isn't even at .490 yet, and it was a great performance... But yeah, "once a generation" sort of ignores Durant, Harden, Derozan, Westbrook and Melo, actually, let alone some of the bigs who've done it (Love, Amare, Bosh)... and all of that is just since the 04-05 season.
Just to clarify, that's 20+ PPG, 60+ GP and .450+ FTr for players 22 and under in their 1st through 3rd season (to account for the age angle). The list broadens out considerably as you drop that FTr, and likewise the PPG. I tightened that down pretty carefully and significantly and Wiggins still isn't generational in that regard, even ignoring the fact that you're operating literally on the basis of a single game.
So no, it's pretty clear that this isn't a once-in-a-generation anything at all, since it's been done several times in the past dozen years and Wiggins hasn't even done it over the balance of the season yet. Prior to this game, he was posting a .404 FTr, which is completely without the meat for a generational assignment, so we're basically talking about a single-game sample being used to justify a description of a generational attribute, which really isn't tenable.
Now, I've been looking at seasonal performances so that we could operate with a legitimate sample. Backing up to the single game of 40+ points with 22+ FTA at 21 or younger in the player's first through third seasons, Wiggins, James, Durant and Blake Griffin have done that just since 2004-05.
Change the criteria to go all the way to < 23 but keep the seasonal requirement (1st through 3rd season) and drop it to 20 FTA, and we have a different story. Now you add John Wall, Ramon Sessions, and Derrick Rose. Take it to the 3pt era and we add Kobe, McGrady, and Shaq.
It's pretty rare as a single game feat. Many of those guys became very high-end offensive players. 4 of them scored 47 points: Wiggins, Kobe, James... and John Wall.
Impressive, yes, but we already know that his ability to draw fouls isn't really generational, it's been directly shown otherwise. What we have here is a fantastic single-game performance from a third-year player who knows how to take advantage of transition, offensive rebounding and switches... and who is also improving in his comfort level attacking the rim. But he has a LOOOOOOOOOOONG way to go before he establishes himself as a generational player ITO drawing fouls, especially since the company he keeps in terms of who has managed this single-game feat is actually NOT representative entirely of players who are fantastic at drawing fouls. Rose, for example, has always kind of blown at drawing fouls and Sessions was a low-scoring player his whole career. Wall had three lower-volume scoring seasons over his first three years and is working on his fourth consecutive season of .341 FTr or less.
Wiggins is good. He's improving. Last year, only 6 guys averaged 20+ ppg with .400+ FTr, and Wiggins was one of them, with Cousins, Derozan, Butler, Lowry and Harden. He's clearly up there in terms of his ability to draw fouls, but let's not let a single game color our view of the guy. It's a marvelous game, but historically, single games have meant only so much. It's Tony Delk all over again, you know what I mean? Not that Wiggins is a Delk-level player, I just mean that drawing conclusions from single-game performances isn't usually a good move.