Knickstape1214 wrote:nolang1 wrote:Knickstape1214 wrote:
It shouldn't. I'm pretty sure he's just making the point that there's no reason to think RJ is a better defender than Romeo aside from reputation or athleticism.
Size/athleticism definitely matters. Barrett is a substantially better rebounder (can easily imagine him having an even bigger edge there if he wasn't competing for boards with Zion) and playing with a much bigger offensive load. Also it has been well-documented that teams/players tend to perform better when behind and worse than ahead, so an apparent defensive lapse when one's team is up by 20+ points is not as huge of a deal to me as it would be to the people who form more of their opinion off of GIFs. Also I was saying that reputation *should* matter if two players are considered relatively close; there's a lot more than 16 college games to go off of.
Reputation shouldn't matter if the reputation doesn't translate to on-court success. RJ isn't a good defender right now. It shouldn't matter at all if he was one at a lower level.
Not sure how anyone can watch both players and think RJ is the better defender (haven't seen Romeo's most recent game, but I doubt it changed that much).
I will say, I tend to give people the benefit of the doubt if they have a reputation going in. Sometimes it also just takes guys longer to adjust to college. For example Luke Kennard had a reputation as a sharpshooter coming into Duke, but was a horrible shooter his entire freshman year. Even with that I still held out hope his shooting would come around.
Now with that said, reputation and benefit of the doubt can only go so far. Sooner or later you have to get to the point where you just say the reputation was wrong. Also it's not like RJ had a Justise Winslow kind of reputation on defense. He was known as a solid defender at best. I think we are getting a clear imagine on the kind of defender RJ is. It's not a good one.















