coldfish wrote:boozapalooza wrote:
Agreed. Too much focus being put on last year in a throw away season where he played 20 games coming off the ACL injury. By all accounts, he looks like he’s recovering well and didnt lose explosiveness. I dont mind paying 20 mil a year for a guy who can average 20-25 points per game for us and fits very well next to Dunn. Averaged 19 ppg at 22 years old as the 3rd option on his team. Everyone agreed when we got him he has the talent to be an elite scorer so why let him walk? Furthermore he’s well liked around the league and can help in recruiting efforts next offseason. No one is gonna sign with us if there isnt talent on the roster.
He has played 4 years in the NBA now.
His PER by year 11.3, 14.3, 14.6, 14.6
On off rating -10.1, -6.9, -4.3, -6.7
Last year really doesn't look like a flyer. What is really striking is how regularly he makes his teams worse when he gets on the floor and that's striking because he has exclusively played on bad teams. Effectively he makes some of the worst teams in the NBA look even worse, by a good bit, when he comes in.
He really doesn't fit with Dunn because he doesn't move well off ball. Not sure it matters because Dunn isn't particularly good either.
We have a couple of options because of what you just brought up. Zach's skillset is weird. Scenario 1: He breaks out like all the Zach apologists are saying he will due to his world class athleticism and theoretical versatility. In this case, we can sit back and enjoy the fact that we have a good core player in fold. Scenario 2: He stays at a -4.3 to -10.1 level, helps with the tank and is unloaded at season's end to Sacramento who coveted him enough to throw 80 million. An argument could be made that we're still leaving all of our options open because of Zach's unique strengths and weaknesses.




















