nolang1 wrote:At Michael Porter's current age, Kevin Durant had already completed the best freshman season in the history of college basketball.
This not all that relevant when the comparison is about whom a player resembles the most. Of course you don't want to compare a great player to a bad one because most likely the similarities are just superficial if that. But a player can be worse at most aspects and still be similar to the player he's compared to as long as their profiles match relatively well (strenghts, weaknesses, playing style, physical built, mentality). Kobe and Jordan are an often-used example.
nolang1 wrote:Other than that I can't think of another aspect of the game where Durant would not have a significant edge. So comparing him to Durant is setting him up to fail (much like how people think Andrew Wiggins is some huge bust mostly in response to people hyping him up with the Maple Jordan nickname/LeBron comparisons) but saying he's Durant without as much length, skill, athleticism, etc. does nothing on its own because it applies to everyone who's ever existed.
Again, just because I think a less athletic Durant is an apt comparison doesn't mean I expect him to reach Durant's level. Not at all. This will depend on many factors and it will be tough. Comparisons and expectations are distinct in my view. The last sentence is just odd as it implies that Porter and Durant have not more in common than most players and that stance would be pretty hard to back up obviously.
Porter and Durant are both scorers first. They can shoot from anywhere on the floor and over people, get to the rim and draw fouls. Both players don't have the most advanced handles and this can be an issue against certain match-ups or strategies. Both are lean, long and have great size for their position. Both have some defensive potential as rebounders and shot blockers but haven't focused on it at a younger age. Both players create primarily off being a scoring threat, i.e. both aren't natural playmakers but can make plays for others.
Athletic ability is the most glaring difference. The fact that Durant was more advanced in other areas where they are similar as well and the fact that Durant went on to improve greatly in the NBA doesn't mean that the comparison isn't worthwhile.