_s_t_u_r_t_ wrote:High 5 wrote:_s_t_u_r_t_ wrote:Going back to what I said... I'm skeptical that one can go back and look at NBA history's best players' numbers as freshmen in college and arrive at that conclusion.
Here's a list of every freshman who shot under 36% since 1992. Please find one you would use a first round pick on (other than MPJ's 3 games, though he's still a question mark himself). I can't search further back than that unfortunately.
Your actual quote was... "every successful NBA player in the history of the game shot better than he did."
So I did the homework for you, or at least, for the mega-money (I refuse to call them by the name that ESPN self-servingly has promoted into the common sports fan vocabulary) conferences. (And, you're welcome... but I was curious anyway... and it actually was fun to see names like Donovan McNabb, Martellus Bennett, DeSean Jackson and Greg Hardy pop up... and old friend Lamar Patterson, too.)
What I found was that there are some guys who were selected high in the 1st round, and some guys who, though they were selected later, actually turned out to make a name for themselves in the NBA partly if not mainly due to their shooting.
That being the case, I'm persuaded that though it's an interesting stat, and it's a red flag, it's not on its own reasonable to default to the assessment of Reddish as destined to never become a successful NBA player.
Kudos for searching further down the list than I did and finding some actual NBA players. I'm not sure why you posted the images instead of just their names, but whatever floats your boat.
Garrett Temple: career 5.9 PPG scorer in NBA
Marcus Thornton: shot .436 and .472 in his two seasons; you were looking at the wrong one
Michael Porter Jr: I already mentioned him; he only played 3 games because of injury
Scott Padgett: career 4.2 PPG scorer in NBA
Luke Ridnour: good call. not worth a top pick, but a legit NBA starter
Justin Holiday: he only attempted 17 FGs that season and he's a career 8.1 PPG scorer in NBA
Jason Collins: he played 1 game and took 4 shots; career 3.6 PPG scorer in NBA
Caris LeVert: another good call. I think he's a decent NBA player
Jordan Hill: again you were looking at the wrong guy
Finney-Smith: career 5.9 PPG scorer in NBA
Ryan Arcidiacono: career 5.6 PPG scorer in NBA
Damon Jones: career 6.6 PPG scorer in NBA, but he did have a legit impact on a few good teams
Brevin Knight: career 7.3 PPG scorer in NBA; I'm surprised his name didn't jump out to me
Vin Baker: once more looking at the wrong guy
You found some NBA rotation players who shot that poorly, kudos again, but I still don't think it changes the sentiment much when the best player is probably Luke Ridnour. If we're drafting Reddish in the top 10 then we're looking at him to at least be a fringe All Star player. I suppose LeVert has the potential to be that based on how he was playing before his injury.
Also, I never said he's destined to fail because of his FG%. I just thought it was worth pointing out how rare it would be for someone to shoot that poorly in college and find the success some people are projecting him to have.