
Atleast this time they try to explain themselves.
Is Giannis Antetokounmpo a shooting guard? Honestly, your guess is as good as mine. But the majority of his minutes had been logged there at the halfway point, and we're sticking with it while fully acknowledging that he's a positionless player who can run the point and then guard a power forward on the opposite end.
No matter where he plays, Antetokounmpo has been thoroughly dominant in every facet of the game.
It's time to stop claiming he'll be unstoppable when he develops an outside shot, as so many announcers for Milwaukee Bucks' opponents are wont to do. He's already unstoppable even with a shaky perimeter stroke (better when he doesn't hesitate before firing), and he'll be flat-out unfair if the three-point attempts ever start falling with consistency.
Defenders simply can't keep him away from the hoop. Not with his quick movements, lanky strides and creative finishes that allow him to dunk when other players would throw up a soon-to-be-rejected layup attempt. And even if they force him into a disadvantageous situation, he has the passing chops either to find a teammate for a spot-up attempt or to reset the play on the perimeter.
Antetokounmpo does everything for the Bucks, whether he's locking down foes outside, guarding the rim or producing on offense. And as a result, he's leading the team in points, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks per game—with a substantial amount of room to spare in every category.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2700742-nba-position-power-rankings-end-of-regular-season-edition-shooting-guards