76ciology wrote:dantley4prez wrote:76ciology wrote:Shaq? He’d still be unstoppable.
He still needs to outscore all those drives and 3s. Which I doubt.
He is also not switchable on D and wouldnt be able to cover multiple guys in a single possession like Draymond or Embiid nor is he fast enough to prevent getting outnumbered on transition defense.
Shaq in his prime was only getting 57-58 TS%. Curry is getting 67 TS% in his prime,atleast 60 TS% in his last 7 of 9 seasons. Hell.. IT in his last season with the Celts was getting 60TS% on 29ppg.
If you look at the numbers, today’s perimeter players are getting better scoring numbers compared to the bigs of previous era.
Now Shaq would have to dunk on Al Horford instead of Dale Davis.
I was once a pro-okafor so i went thru want you’re going through.
I had a confirmation bias also.
I ask you, what happens then when Ayton goes up against Gobert, Whiteside or Embiid?
Guys like Horford or Baynes maybe short, but they are strong enough to prevent you to go inside the paint or get you to kill some more secs until they throw a double and you will have a very limited time to throw a crosscourt pass to an open shooter with multiple 7’ wingspan defenders trying to deflect that pass.
If you pull it off, then good. But you have to ask yourself.. was it a better offense than running a PnR, motion, 8 secs or less basketball or a dribble drive?
A 3 pt shot is no good in the hands of Boban Marjanovic. It may be the more efficient shot, but not for Boban.
The shot depends on the person taking it. They all have different comfort levels in different areas of the floor. Ayton is as comfortable as anyone I’ve seen as a freshman scorer.
Whiteside isn’t that good of a defender.
I don’t know what happens when Ayton goes up against Gobert and Embiid. Ayton scored more points than any freshman center since 1992. I’d give him as much of a shot as anyone. If he can put everything together, he could lead the league in scoring. I firmly believe that.


















