tong po wrote:GimmeDat wrote:How many people are going to attack him no matter how well he plays? He started off slow, he got in to a great rhythm before the injury and had some big games, now he's been out for weeks, just returned and the haters are using it as an excuse to rip in to him again.
I'm not attacking him, I'm trying to respond to complete absurdity like this:GimmeDat wrote:Grant is in no way better than Dunn. He's a slightly better shooter, which is Dunn's weakness. That's it. Grant's a mediocre backup, it's amazing how skewed some of the views on our PG's are.
Grant has the higher ORPM. Higher OBPM. Higher PER. Higher WS/48. Higher ORTG. Higher TS%. Higher AST/TO ratio. Higher 2P FG%. Higher 3P FG%. Higher FT%. Higher FTA/36.
Kris Dunn is worse in almost every single offensive statistic. Yet he's some future building block and Grant is just some bum? Why?
For one, it's completely ignoring volume. It's easy to have nice efficiency metrics when you're averaging 13 points per 36. He's incapable of any advanced shot making and so only takes open shots/drives. That can be seen as a positive if you're a 2nd unit player and surrounded by superior options, but as a starting PG, it's just a non-starter.
Dunn was putting it together before the injury with far more advanced creation for himself and others. He was playing at a level Grant will never reach in his career. Which segues in to the ongoing debate that's been going on all season here about Grant vs Dunn as a facilitator. Raw assist totals be damned, anyone with any feel for the game of basketball can see how Grant kills offensive sets with his slow decision making, lack of vision, lack of creation ability, stagnant dribbling etc.
The difference in the quality of this teams play once he got injured was night and day, it should speak for itself.