Around the NBA: 2017—2018

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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#921 » by Pillendreher » Wed Sep 5, 2018 8:03 pm

bondom34 wrote:And it comes full circle.


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"I don't know of any player that, when the shot goes up, he doesn't want it to go in," Donovan said
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#922 » by ThunderBolt » Wed Sep 5, 2018 8:38 pm

slick_watts wrote:this just makes it more dubious, since the benefits from training with westbrook did not become evident until the following season? yawn.

Well the benefits certainly weren’t from spending three years in Orlando because he wasn’t an allstar there. Maybe he should have dropped those 18lbs before he went to Indiana.
bisme37 wrote:If there were magnets in basketballs so strong they changed the path of the ball as it flew through the air, wouldn't the ball then stick magnetically to the rim when it got there?
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#923 » by slick_watts » Wed Sep 5, 2018 9:54 pm

Knrstz wrote:
slick_watts wrote:this just makes it more dubious, since the benefits from training with westbrook did not become evident until the following season? yawn.


Well the benefits certainly weren’t from spending three years in Orlando because he wasn’t an allstar there. Maybe he should have dropped those 18lbs before he went to Indiana.


it was just natural development of a gifted player-- development that was somewhat masked on the thunder by westbrook's 40%+ usage and the necessary pigeon holing of oladipo into a westbrook-friendly role.
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#924 » by bondom34 » Wed Sep 5, 2018 10:53 pm

:lol:
MyUniBroDavis wrote: he was like YALL PEOPLE WHO DOUBT ME WILL SEE YALLS STATS ARE WRONG I HAVE THE BIG BRAIN PLAYS MUCHO NASTY BIG BRAIN BIG CHUNGUS BRAIN YOU BOYS ON UR BBALL REFERENCE NO UNDERSTANDO
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#925 » by ThunderBolt » Wed Sep 5, 2018 11:28 pm

slick_watts wrote:
Knrstz wrote:
slick_watts wrote:this just makes it more dubious, since the benefits from training with westbrook did not become evident until the following season? yawn.


Well the benefits certainly weren’t from spending three years in Orlando because he wasn’t an allstar there. Maybe he should have dropped those 18lbs before he went to Indiana.


it was just natural development of a gifted player-- development that was somewhat masked on the thunder by westbrook's 40%+ usage and the necessary pigeon holing of oladipo into a westbrook-friendly role.


It’s always someone else’s fault when it comes to a persons weight problems. Vic was fat. Once he owned it, he got better.
bisme37 wrote:If there were magnets in basketballs so strong they changed the path of the ball as it flew through the air, wouldn't the ball then stick magnetically to the rim when it got there?
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#926 » by Pillendreher » Thu Sep 6, 2018 12:39 pm

bondom34 wrote::lol:


I'm too lazy to try if the search is functional again, but if I do remember correctly, slick was on here saying something along the lines of "I do hope those DRAPM numbers are correct" because Oladipo wasn't that consistent with anything else. But I guess now it's a "natural development" even though he was more or less the same player for four straight years without showing any signs of "breaking out".
"I don't know of any player that, when the shot goes up, he doesn't want it to go in," Donovan said
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#927 » by slick_watts » Thu Sep 6, 2018 8:53 pm

Knrstz wrote:
slick_watts wrote:
Knrstz wrote:
Well the benefits certainly weren’t from spending three years in Orlando because he wasn’t an allstar there. Maybe he should have dropped those 18lbs before he went to Indiana.


it was just natural development of a gifted player-- development that was somewhat masked on the thunder by westbrook's 40%+ usage and the necessary pigeon holing of oladipo into a westbrook-friendly role.


It’s always someone else’s fault when it comes to a persons weight problems. Vic was fat. Once he owned it, he got better.


anyone who knows me will tell you i have zero sympathy for fats.
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#928 » by slick_watts » Thu Sep 6, 2018 8:55 pm

Pillendreher wrote:
bondom34 wrote::lol:


I'm too lazy to try if the search is functional again, but if I do remember correctly, slick was on here saying something along the lines of "I do hope those DRAPM numbers are correct" because Oladipo wasn't that consistent with anything else. But I guess now it's a "natural development" even though he was more or less the same player for four straight years without showing any signs of "breaking out".


i was higher on oladipo than most because of his rpm progression and schizo role changes on the magic. i did not expect westbrook to set usage records or for oladipo to play bench minutes with the worst bench in the nba. it turned out i was actually correct about this, and featuring in a role suited for his skillset combined with natural development of those skills has seen him turn into a star.

incidentally, i don't believe wesbtrook actively makes a player like oladipo worse. it's just hard for certain players to co-exist in optimal roles next to him.
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#929 » by Pillendreher » Thu Sep 6, 2018 9:51 pm

slick_watts wrote:
Pillendreher wrote:
bondom34 wrote::lol:


I'm too lazy to try if the search is functional again, but if I do remember correctly, slick was on here saying something along the lines of "I do hope those DRAPM numbers are correct" because Oladipo wasn't that consistent with anything else. But I guess now it's a "natural development" even though he was more or less the same player for four straight years without showing any signs of "breaking out".


i was higher on oladipo than most because of his rpm progression and schizo role changes on the magic. i did not expect westbrook to set usage records or for oladipo to play bench minutes with the worst bench in the nba. it turned out i was actually correct about this, and featuring in a role suited for his skillset combined with natural development of those skills has seen him turn into a star.


What a bunch of nonsense. There was no indication whatsoever that Oladipo could turn into the player he was for the Pacers last season. His improvement was like when you start your own player on NBA 2K and then finally have enough points to really upgrade your athleticism and speed. He went from being Mr Two Quarters (he played well for one half, but then never managed to play well for the whole game) to a Star player who carried his team. This was neither a "natural development" of said skills nor a "role suited for his skillset". This is just revisionist history trying to pin something nobody saw coming on Westbrook. You don't go from "Man, the Thunder are dumping salary while getting Paul George :o " to "Oladipo is a star" simply because your role increases and you just get better at what you've already been doing.
"I don't know of any player that, when the shot goes up, he doesn't want it to go in," Donovan said
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#930 » by slick_watts » Thu Sep 6, 2018 11:20 pm

Pillendreher wrote:There was no indication whatsoever that Oladipo could turn into the player he was for the Pacers last season.


and why was that?

Pillendreher wrote:This is just revisionist history trying to pin something nobody saw coming on Westbrook.


oh right, it was because he didn't have the opportunity to 'turn into' that player next to westbrook.

Pillendreher wrote:You don't go from "Man, the Thunder are dumping salary while getting Paul George :o " to "Oladipo is a star" simply because your role increases and you just get better at what you've already been doing.


that's exactly how westbrook won mvp. yes, you do get better by doing those things.
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#931 » by ThunderBolt » Thu Sep 6, 2018 11:54 pm

slick_watts wrote:
and why was that?

Look for the constant in the preceding years and see what changed in Indiana. Russ wasn’t the constant. His body is what changed. I’m sure there are other factors such as motivation from being traded twice, learning from russ and maybe being a better fit in Indiana.

I’m not even a die hard russ supporter. He’s the most frustrating player I’ve ever supported. I don’t think your off base on some of your assessments. I just don’t think it’s as simple as pinpointing one thing and saying that’s the issue. Vic and George both sucked at leading a bench unit without russ on the floor. Dononvan and by extension, Presti, deserve blame too.
bisme37 wrote:If there were magnets in basketballs so strong they changed the path of the ball as it flew through the air, wouldn't the ball then stick magnetically to the rim when it got there?
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#932 » by bondom34 » Fri Sep 7, 2018 12:49 am

You all try to be reasonable. That's the first mistake.
MyUniBroDavis wrote: he was like YALL PEOPLE WHO DOUBT ME WILL SEE YALLS STATS ARE WRONG I HAVE THE BIG BRAIN PLAYS MUCHO NASTY BIG BRAIN BIG CHUNGUS BRAIN YOU BOYS ON UR BBALL REFERENCE NO UNDERSTANDO
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#933 » by bondom34 » Fri Sep 7, 2018 2:51 am

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MyUniBroDavis wrote: he was like YALL PEOPLE WHO DOUBT ME WILL SEE YALLS STATS ARE WRONG I HAVE THE BIG BRAIN PLAYS MUCHO NASTY BIG BRAIN BIG CHUNGUS BRAIN YOU BOYS ON UR BBALL REFERENCE NO UNDERSTANDO
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#934 » by Pillendreher » Fri Sep 7, 2018 7:19 am

slick_watts wrote:
Pillendreher wrote:This is just revisionist history trying to pin something nobody saw coming on Westbrook.


oh right, it was because he didn't have the opportunity to 'turn into' that player next to westbrook.


He had plenty of chances to actually play well as a Thunder. It's not like they forced him into the role they gave Patterson last year. Unfortunately, it just never happened.
"I don't know of any player that, when the shot goes up, he doesn't want it to go in," Donovan said
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#935 » by Andre Roberstan » Fri Sep 7, 2018 2:19 pm

Knrstz wrote:
slick_watts wrote:
and why was that?

Look for the constant in the preceding years and see what changed in Indiana. Russ wasn’t the constant. His body is what changed. I’m sure there are other factors such as motivation from being traded twice, learning from russ and maybe being a better fit in Indiana.

I’m not even a die hard russ supporter. He’s the most frustrating player I’ve ever supported. I don’t think your off base on some of your assessments. I just don’t think it’s as simple as pinpointing one thing and saying that’s the issue. Vic and George both sucked at leading a bench unit without russ on the floor. Dononvan and by extension, Presti, deserve blame too.


There's a significant fit change—he was shoehorned into a catch-and-shoot role in OKC, more than he is in Indiana. His pull-up improved in Indy (at least over the start of the year...he regressed somewhat later in the season).

I do actually agree with Justin that we might have seen at least SOME of the improvement he showed in Indy had he been in a different environment. Not discounting the effect of changing his body, learning from Russ, etc. But playing in OKC definitely didn't suit him. (That's also BTS stuff, too...he was a good soldier but it wasn't what he expected.)
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#936 » by slick_watts » Fri Sep 7, 2018 2:38 pm

Knrstz wrote:I’m not even a die hard russ supporter. He’s the most frustrating player I’ve ever supported. I don’t think your off base on some of your assessments. I just don’t think it’s as simple as pinpointing one thing and saying that’s the issue. Vic and George both sucked at leading a bench unit without russ on the floor. Dononvan and by extension, Presti, deserve blame too.


wait, what are we even talking about now? donovan and presti deserve blame? for what? i'm talking about victor oladipo and the claim that westbrook was a primary influence for his improvement last year in indiana. i think that claim is mostly b.s. with perhaps a grain of truth that maybe westbrook inspired him to work out harder. this sounds like fairy tale stuff to me. and that grain of truth imo is heavily outweighed by the role that oladipo was necessarily forced into on the thunder his one season here.

what does that have to do with billy donovan or sam presti? or, really, even westbrook himself? it's not a slight on westbrook to suggest he does not have magical powers that manifest themselves randomly on players only after they stop playing with him. because nobody has that ability.
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#937 » by ThunderBolt » Fri Sep 7, 2018 2:53 pm

Andre Roberstan wrote:
Knrstz wrote:
slick_watts wrote:
and why was that?

Look for the constant in the preceding years and see what changed in Indiana. Russ wasn’t the constant. His body is what changed. I’m sure there are other factors such as motivation from being traded twice, learning from russ and maybe being a better fit in Indiana.

I’m not even a die hard russ supporter. He’s the most frustrating player I’ve ever supported. I don’t think your off base on some of your assessments. I just don’t think it’s as simple as pinpointing one thing and saying that’s the issue. Vic and George both sucked at leading a bench unit without russ on the floor. Dononvan and by extension, Presti, deserve blame too.


There's a significant fit change—he was shoehorned into a catch-and-shoot role in OKC, more than he is in Indiana. His pull-up improved in Indy (at least over the start of the year...he regressed somewhat later in the season).

I do actually agree with Justin that we might have seen at least SOME of the improvement he showed in Indy had he been in a different environment. Not discounting the effect of changing his body, learning from Russ, etc. But playing in OKC definitely didn't suit him. (That's also BTS stuff, too...he was a good soldier but it wasn't what he expected.)

I don’t disagree with that but we aren’t acknowledging the player he was in Orlando. I’ll admit that I’ve never watched a lot of magic games but regardless of his role in there, he wasn’t the player for them that he is now.
bisme37 wrote:If there were magnets in basketballs so strong they changed the path of the ball as it flew through the air, wouldn't the ball then stick magnetically to the rim when it got there?
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#938 » by ThunderBolt » Fri Sep 7, 2018 3:16 pm

slick_watts wrote:
Knrstz wrote:I’m not even a die hard russ supporter. He’s the most frustrating player I’ve ever supported. I don’t think your off base on some of your assessments. I just don’t think it’s as simple as pinpointing one thing and saying that’s the issue. Vic and George both sucked at leading a bench unit without russ on the floor. Dononvan and by extension, Presti, deserve blame too.


wait, what are we even talking about now? donovan and presti deserve blame? for what? i'm talking about victor oladipo and the claim that westbrook was a primary influence for his improvement last year in indiana. i think that claim is mostly b.s. with perhaps a grain of truth that maybe westbrook inspired him to work out harder. this sounds like fairy tale stuff to me. and that grain of truth imo is heavily outweighed by the role that oladipo was necessarily forced into on the thunder his one season here.

what does that have to do with billy donovan or sam presti? or, really, even westbrook himself? it's not a slight on westbrook to suggest he does not have magical powers that manifest themselves randomly on players only after they stop playing with him. because nobody has that ability.

I think we are saying two different things. You are saying Russ isn’t solely responsible for his improvement. I’m saying russ isn’t fully to blame for his lack of development.
bisme37 wrote:If there were magnets in basketballs so strong they changed the path of the ball as it flew through the air, wouldn't the ball then stick magnetically to the rim when it got there?
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#939 » by slick_watts » Fri Sep 7, 2018 3:22 pm

Knrstz wrote:
slick_watts wrote:
Knrstz wrote:I’m not even a die hard russ supporter. He’s the most frustrating player I’ve ever supported. I don’t think your off base on some of your assessments. I just don’t think it’s as simple as pinpointing one thing and saying that’s the issue. Vic and George both sucked at leading a bench unit without russ on the floor. Dononvan and by extension, Presti, deserve blame too.


wait, what are we even talking about now? donovan and presti deserve blame? for what? i'm talking about victor oladipo and the claim that westbrook was a primary influence for his improvement last year in indiana. i think that claim is mostly b.s. with perhaps a grain of truth that maybe westbrook inspired him to work out harder. this sounds like fairy tale stuff to me. and that grain of truth imo is heavily outweighed by the role that oladipo was necessarily forced into on the thunder his one season here.

what does that have to do with billy donovan or sam presti? or, really, even westbrook himself? it's not a slight on westbrook to suggest he does not have magical powers that manifest themselves randomly on players only after they stop playing with him. because nobody has that ability.

I think we are saying two different things. You are saying Russ isn’t solely responsible for his improvement. I’m saying russ isn’t fully to blame for his lack of development.


fully to blame? no. i wouldn't even really 'blame' westbrook, either. westbrook is what he is. he's a great player but his skill set demands a certain play style from his teammates. we saw how disastrous it was early last year when westbrook tried to change what he was to fit everyone else. that's just how it is with him. he's not 'to blame'. but putting another 30 usage ball dominant guard next to him is not going to work, and that's the role it appears oladipo was best suited for. not the spot up shooter / defensive role player he was next to westbrook.
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Re: Around the NBA: 2017—2018 

Post#940 » by Pillendreher » Sun Sep 16, 2018 9:31 am

Jimmy Butler is approaching cancer territory rather quickly. I wonder what kind of team that guy needs around himself so that the team chemistry doesn't suck. Looks like as soon as he started to "lead", there's been problems ever since. Maybe he needs somebody to do the leading for him so he can settle into a minor role. But does he even want that? Seems to me he's been quite eager to "be the man" since he made the jump to being one of the best players in the league.
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