Buttah304 wrote:thebuzzardman wrote:KnixinSix wrote:
How about Grant Hill with a little less BBIQ in terms of not quite elite decision making but still good but also a slightly better scoring potential.
Possible.
Batum?
It's so hard to find a comp. It has to be a guy with a decent bball IQ, willing passer, but more a power player who scores inside, not the most fluid handle, but of course shoots some jumpers.
RJ's comps could change based on if he gets a little more fluid ballhandling and shooting.
To be honest RJ reminds me a little of GS Mitch Richmond. Granted RJ is taller but Mitch himself was around 6-5/200. But to my point Mitch didn’t even shoot 3s until Sacramento. But right out the gate he was a triple treat (scoring-rebounding-passing) and was constantly going to the FT line. MR was also strong as hell as a rookie. What makes RJ comparisons tricky is that he’s a lefty.
That's an interesting comp too.
I disregard left vs right, as it's hard to find enough leftys for comparison.
Mitch Ritchmond was a damn good player who kind of gets forgotten, maybe especially in NYC, as Mullin has the NYC roots, and Tim Hardaway had the extra career as a villain, with the Heat.
Every bit the player as those two guys though. It's interesting how "really good" guys, of about 20+ years, just fall out of the collective consciousness, and people tend to rely on "star" and HOF comps.
On a musically related "note" of who gets remembered hundreds of years from now:
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/29/magazine/which-rock-star-will-historians-of-the-future-remember.html
Answer: