http://www.odetooden.com/home/2017/9/20/episode-40-the-young-prospects-of-eurobasket
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reanimator wrote:Novocaine wrote:3. No way, nobody would even come close.
I mean, if you send them back in a time machine and put them through the same developmental path Doncic took and they react fine to moving to Spain at 14 years old and so on, sure, I can see a a few having a similar impact. Perhaps not quite as high, Doncic is very precocious in terms of physical development, but in the same ballpark, sure. Fultz for example would be a much different player -much closer to his eventual ceiling- if he already had seasons of practising and playing against pros under his belt. But that's not their premise - what they're saying is that this universe's 18 years old Fultz, etc, would have no chance of having the same impact. And they wouldn't - they'd get clobbered by guys much bigger, more experienced, more mature. Transitioning from high-school basketball to Doncic's level is basically impossible.
Idk if I can buy this.
When we had guys jumping from HS to the pros, did we not have some who were rotational players in the NBA?
reanimator wrote:Apollo64 wrote:reanimator wrote:
"Everyone before him" doesn't include American players so I don't care.
To put things in perspective, Karl Anthony Towns, arguably one of the best prospects of the decade, wasn't seeing much playing time for the Dominican Republic in a similar (but weaker) tournament.
http://archive.fiba.com/pages/eng/fa/p/q/Karl-Anthony%20TOWNS/pid/95045/_//players.html
If he wasn't getting playing time then what are we even talking about? Put Towns on an actual team for a full season and let him get minutes...he would produce.
Novocaine wrote:.I don't know - rookie McGrady averaged 5/2/1 in a putrid .486 TS% playing 15mpg of no defense whatsoever pre-All-Star. Kobe, 7/2/1 in a mediocre .520 TS%. Kemp, 5/4 .482TS%. Rashard Lewis, 3/2, .411TS%. Monta Ellis, 4/2, .492TS%. JR Smith, 7/2/2, with excruciating .446TS% efficiency
BaDaBo wrote: In 2013 FIBA Americas Championship for Men he was 18 like Doncic this year. The real question is: "Why wasn't he getting time?".
reanimator wrote:BaDaBo wrote: In 2013 FIBA Americas Championship for Men he was 18 like Doncic this year. The real question is: "Why wasn't he getting time?".
Being that he put up 18/10 at age 19/20....its safe to say he could have produced at 18.
reanimator wrote:Bob8 wrote:
3. You can disagree and believe whatever you want. But the fact is Doncic is doing things that anyone before couldn’t. Let’s look to Ntilikina, he couldn’t do this in the 3rd tier competition in Europe and he even didn’t make in the French NT, which Slovenia destroyed by 20 in Eurobasket.
"Everyone before him" doesn't include American players so I don't care.
And Ricky Rubio was doing things in Europe that other Euro prospects who turned out way better than him couldn't do so what is the significance of that?
reanimator wrote:Apollo64 wrote:reanimator wrote:
"Everyone before him" doesn't include American players so I don't care.
To put things in perspective, Karl Anthony Towns, arguably one of the best prospects of the decade, wasn't seeing much playing time for the Dominican Republic in a similar (but weaker) tournament.
http://archive.fiba.com/pages/eng/fa/p/q/Karl-Anthony%20TOWNS/pid/95045/_//players.html
If he wasn't getting playing time then what are we even talking about? Put Towns on an actual team for a full season and let him get minutes...he would produce.
But if guys like Towns or even Giannis didn't do much against FIBA comp then maybe statistical production in international competition isn't predictive?
reanimator wrote:Novocaine wrote:.I don't know - rookie McGrady averaged 5/2/1 in a putrid .486 TS% playing 15mpg of no defense whatsoever pre-All-Star. Kobe, 7/2/1 in a mediocre .520 TS%. Kemp, 5/4 .482TS%. Rashard Lewis, 3/2, .411TS%. Monta Ellis, 4/2, .492TS%. JR Smith, 7/2/2, with excruciating .446TS% efficiency
Doncic is only putting up 7/4.5/3.5 on 44 FG% and 33 3pt% in an inferior league in similar minutes in an era with more spacing....so no way you can call what McGrady/Kobe/JR Smith/Josh Smith etc did as putrid or mediocre.
Apollo64 wrote:
No, this shows that, in order to produce against senior FIBA comp, the bar for teenagers is set extremely high. This is not college.
reanimator wrote:Novocaine wrote:.I don't know - rookie McGrady averaged 5/2/1 in a putrid .486 TS% playing 15mpg of no defense whatsoever pre-All-Star. Kobe, 7/2/1 in a mediocre .520 TS%. Kemp, 5/4 .482TS%. Rashard Lewis, 3/2, .411TS%. Monta Ellis, 4/2, .492TS%. JR Smith, 7/2/2, with excruciating .446TS% efficiency
Doncic is only putting up 7/4.5/3.5 on 44 FG% and 33 3pt% in an inferior league in similar minutes in an era with more spacing....so no way you can call what McGrady/Kobe/JR Smith/Josh Smith etc did as putrid or mediocre.
Novocaine wrote:reanimator wrote:Novocaine wrote:.I don't know - rookie McGrady averaged 5/2/1 in a putrid .486 TS% playing 15mpg of no defense whatsoever pre-All-Star. Kobe, 7/2/1 in a mediocre .520 TS%. Kemp, 5/4 .482TS%. Rashard Lewis, 3/2, .411TS%. Monta Ellis, 4/2, .492TS%. JR Smith, 7/2/2, with excruciating .446TS% efficiency
Doncic is only putting up 7/4.5/3.5 on 44 FG% and 33 3pt% in an inferior league in similar minutes in an era with more spacing....so no way you can call what McGrady/Kobe/JR Smith/Josh Smith etc did as putrid or mediocre.
Those are the numbers of a pretty good player in Europe - we know that because we just saw him showing he's among the very best European players, including NBAers. McGrady/Kobe/etc were scrubs who were rotational players only in the sense they'd get regular minutes. And that was the year after HS already. Check what Pelton say about the statistical impact in a historical context.
reanimator wrote:Novocaine wrote:reanimator wrote:
Doncic is only putting up 7/4.5/3.5 on 44 FG% and 33 3pt% in an inferior league in similar minutes in an era with more spacing....so no way you can call what McGrady/Kobe/JR Smith/Josh Smith etc did as putrid or mediocre.
Those are the numbers of a pretty good player in Europe - we know that because we just saw him showing he's among the very best European players, including NBAers. McGrady/Kobe/etc were scrubs who were rotational players only in the sense they'd get regular minutes. And that was the year after HS already. Check what Pelton say about the statistical impact in a historical context.
I hate to tell you this but "pretty good European player in Europe" = scrub in the NBA.
Can't be a "scrub" and a rotational player in the NBA. Even NBA backups are better than the best Euroleague players.
reanimator wrote:Apollo64 wrote:
No, this shows that, in order to produce against senior FIBA comp, the bar for teenagers is set extremely high. This is not college.
Only true for foreign prospects.
And by produce, you really mean get minutes.
Novocaine wrote:SportsGuy8 wrote:Bob8 wrote:Fairytales how skills and feeling for the game can be learned, are almost everytime only fairytales.
I've been saying this for years. Most busts, from both Europe and the US, happen because scouts mainly look at athletic abilities and expect that since a player is still young, he's going to one day go EUREKA, get it, and suddenly know how to play the game.
That almost never happens. The rare exceptions are the bigs who started playing basketball late in their teens. For everyone else it's true that if you're not a fundamentally sound player with at least a decent bball-IQ in your late-teens, you're never going to become one.
Well, there's this guy from some decades ago who had that reputation even into his 20s - a super-athletic ball-hog who'd get by his athletic ability and had little polish and skill to his game and, above all, didn't know how to win and how to play the right way. A selfish low IQ player who would take almost 30 shots per game, wasn't a team player, coudln't even shoot 20% from distance and would just jump over people to dunk stuff.
He ended up doing alright in the NBA though - he's the consensus best player in the history of the game, or at least was for a couple of decades.
I'm sure one could come up with a few other examples - say, the current MVP.
I understand selective memory phenomenons, but that take it to a whole new level. And of course athletic guys are overrepresented among busts - they're way overrepresented among high draft picks, which means they're overrepresented among guys with high expectations that can fall into the "bust" category. It's a consequence of the fact that Jordan was uber-athletic and Westbrook is uber-athletic and LeBron is uber-athletic and so on.


reanimator wrote:Novocaine wrote:reanimator wrote:
Doncic is only putting up 7/4.5/3.5 on 44 FG% and 33 3pt% in an inferior league in similar minutes in an era with more spacing....so no way you can call what McGrady/Kobe/JR Smith/Josh Smith etc did as putrid or mediocre.
Those are the numbers of a pretty good player in Europe - we know that because we just saw him showing he's among the very best European players, including NBAers. McGrady/Kobe/etc were scrubs who were rotational players only in the sense they'd get regular minutes. And that was the year after HS already. Check what Pelton say about the statistical impact in a historical context.
I hate to tell you this but "pretty good European player in Europe" = scrub in the NBA.
Can't be a "scrub" and a rotational player in the NBA. Even NBA backups are better than the best Euroleague players.
Mirotic12 wrote:reanimator wrote:Novocaine wrote:
Those are the numbers of a pretty good player in Europe - we know that because we just saw him showing he's among the very best European players, including NBAers. McGrady/Kobe/etc were scrubs who were rotational players only in the sense they'd get regular minutes. And that was the year after HS already. Check what Pelton say about the statistical impact in a historical context.
I hate to tell you this but "pretty good European player in Europe" = scrub in the NBA.
Can't be a "scrub" and a rotational player in the NBA. Even NBA backups are better than the best Euroleague players.
False. Not a single bench player in NBA is as good as Sergio Llull and Vassilis Spanoulis.
Never mind that just in the last 10 years or so, probably a couple dozen or so NBA starters, 6th men, and rotation players (in the team's main 8 players) have gone from NBA to EuroLeague (while still in their prime), and done nothing in EuroLeague, or have not been any better in EuroLeague than they were in the NBA, or in fact, were better in the NBA than they were in EuroLeague.
NBA starters, plenty of them, have gone to EuroLeague and not done jack squat. So you are factually wrong.
HoopsMalone wrote:He's arguably the best prospect ever at his age.
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reanimator wrote:HoopsMalone wrote:He's arguably the best prospect ever at his age.
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There is no argument for him being a better prospect than Lebron. None.