dbrandon wrote:Capn'O wrote:At this point, I'm more interested in the trend line than the ranking. And by "interested," I mean "interested" and not "haha, you were wrong Rose is actually great" as I have my own serious reservations with him. IIRC, just recently, he was the worst PG in RPM but the eye test tells me he's making progress in finding his teammates, picking his spots, and defense. The things that improve your RPM because you're playing better team ball. His jump from the worst to meh reflects that. He's still holding those putrid games from earlier that sack the rankings. So does he continue to improve? Level off? Revert? That's what we (and hopefully the Knicks brass!) should be looking at.
Yeah, he's been better than he was with the Bulls, though that's not saying much. My gut tells me to trust the long-term sample over the short-term one, but he might be at average starter level by advanced stats by the end of the season. Who knows.
If by that, you mean the past three to four games absolutely. We need to see a sustained period of this type of play. I'm more encouraged by what I'm increasingly seeing in games than the stat upticks. He's starting to know where guys are going to be when he puts his head down to the basket. At first, he only knew how to find Melo and otherwise would put it up himself. Only simple passes otherwise. Now he's kicking to KP, Holiday, and Lee on the perimeter and is making more entry passes to the post and then moving off ball. Then, he's had a few more elaborate two man plays with Melo. Rose as a multi-threat player is a much more effective player than the kamikaze player he had been. His ability to play more as a cog and then pick his spots for his still very good scoring ability will improve those TS%, RPM, WS/48, and so forth. It already has from the season's start. How much so will come out in the wash.
bondom34 wrote:I think at this point, the entire thread was pointed at NY having Rose and Noah or Calderon and RoLo, plus a bunch less payroll next year.
And what I've been arguing is that this view of basing the entire offseason on the comparison of Rose/Noah to Jose/RoLo still doesn't look at the Knicks' moves holistically or account for the new salary reality. Many more pieces were involved, some of which are playing great ball for the team. Guys like Willy, Jennings, Holiday, Kuz, and Lee have all played really well and the investments in KOQ and KP are maturing. That entire group is what? $30-35 million/year total give or take? That's really good value right now.
Noah's salary presents a long term risk that is already rearing its head. That said, at present time the Knicks could sustain a Noah injury pretty easily and have actually gone on this run with him sitting a few games. KOQ and Willy are playing great ball and KP can play the C for some matchups with Melo at the 4. All have specifically attributed their improvement to Noah's influence. Combined, the Knicks bigs corps have a very reasonable salary impact.
He's been mildly better than last year, similar to 2 years ago, so still a well below average starter paid like a star. And at the same time trading Lopez for him meant they signed the Noah deal. Which looks really bad in hindsight and worse if there are any injuries.
The biggest long term concern is still with the point guard position. Jennings is an easy yes to bring back so far. Whether you even
can bring both him and Rose back (I believe NYK would qualify for the MLE if they extend Rose as opposed to re-signing him?) is uncertain. Let alone whether you'd want both.