Not only did the Lakers player him at C, the Pelicans did as well, quite often.
I think Randle will see about 15-18 mpg at C
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3toheadmelo wrote:
thebuzzardman wrote:
Not only did the Lakers player him at C, the Pelicans did as well, quite often.
I think Randle will see about 15-18 mpg at C
Polk377 wrote:thebuzzardman wrote:
Not only did the Lakers player him at C, the Pelicans did as well, quite often.
I think Randle will see about 15-18 mpg at C
He was the "Center" for LA 49% 2 seasons ago and 26% with NO. I would lean closer to the 26% we saw last season based on the personnel on the Knicks. Looking at potentially 8-12 minutes a game at C.

thebuzzardman wrote:
Not only did the Lakers player him at C, the Pelicans did as well, quite often.
I think Randle will see about 15-18 mpg at C

BLACKFEET 2010 wrote:Dude hung numbers on all the western conference Monstar big men...he’s 24 and improving every year.
The coach clearly has designs on how he’d use him.
The negativity is killing me man. We didn’t get a 29 year old with bad knees. We didn’t trade away picks to starphuch. Second year with this set up: not one bad contract. None of y’all are used to that because it’s never been the case as Knick fans. And y’all acting all nose up snobby like we’re too good for good players who aren’t statnerd perfect.
The kid is going to be great here. The rubber is hitting the road at the right time with this group.
Everybody went full LolKnicks on their signings and trades this summer while we have arguably the deepest team in the division now and the flexibility to do anything we want whenever that anything presents itself.
Stay woke.
Jimmit79 wrote:Yea RJ played well he was definitely the x factor
seren wrote:Listening to the coach, it sounds like he will start Randle/Gibson/Morris trio. That is the optimal offense/defense combo. Gibson and Morris partially hides Randle's defensive deficiencies. Robinson gets to play against backups.

thebuzzardman wrote:seren wrote:Listening to the coach, it sounds like he will start Randle/Gibson/Morris trio. That is the optimal offense/defense combo. Gibson and Morris partially hides Randle's defensive deficiencies. Robinson gets to play against backups.
Why not Randle\Mitch\Morris?
Other than the Knicks could switch among all 3 players with Randle\Morris\Gibson, to a degree.
BLACKFEET 2010 wrote:Dude hung numbers on all the western conference Monstar big men...he’s 24 and improving every year.
The coach clearly has designs on how he’d use him.
The negativity is killing me man. We didn’t get a 29 year old with bad knees. We didn’t trade away picks to starphuch. Second year with this set up: not one bad contract. None of y’all are used to that because it’s never been the case as Knick fans. And y’all acting all nose up snobby like we’re too good for good players who aren’t statnerd perfect.
The kid is going to be great here. The rubber is hitting the road at the right time with this group.
Everybody went full LolKnicks on their signings and trades this summer while we have arguably the deepest team in the division now and the flexibility to do anything we want whenever that anything presents itself.
Stay woke.
thebuzzardman wrote:seren wrote:Listening to the coach, it sounds like he will start Randle/Gibson/Morris trio. That is the optimal offense/defense combo. Gibson and Morris partially hides Randle's defensive deficiencies. Robinson gets to play against backups.
Why not Randle\Mitch\Morris?
Other than the Knicks could switch among all 3 players with Randle\Morris\Gibson, to a degree.
seren wrote:thebuzzardman wrote:seren wrote:Listening to the coach, it sounds like he will start Randle/Gibson/Morris trio. That is the optimal offense/defense combo. Gibson and Morris partially hides Randle's defensive deficiencies. Robinson gets to play against backups.
Why not Randle\Mitch\Morris?
Other than the Knicks could switch among all 3 players with Randle\Morris\Gibson, to a degree.
Taj has a mid range game that provides a bit more space. That would be my guess.


seren wrote:I will ask an honest question. I am not trying to troll. How different is Randle compared to Kanter? I haven’t followed his career much. I went through their advanced stats and didn’t see anything that is particularly striking in Randle’s favor. He seems to have put numbers but it didn’t provide wins. The only difference seems to be his assist rate in his favor. Other stats like rebounding (especially offensive) is in Kanter’s favor. Any insights from those who followed the dude?
seren wrote:I will ask an honest question. I am not trying to troll. How different is Randle compared to Kanter? I haven’t followed his career much. I went through their advanced stats and didn’t see anything that is particularly striking in Randle’s favor. He seems to have put numbers but it didn’t provide wins. The only difference seems to be his assist rate in his favor. Other stats like rebounding (especially offensive) is in Kanter’s favor. Any insights from those who followed the dude?
Defensive Impact
Besides being an elite offensive force, Randle has been a very impactful defender over the course of the season. Randle is second on the team in contested 2s per game and 4th overall in contested shots. Inside of 6 feet, Randle is second on the team in shots contested behind Lopez and players shoot 4% worse there than they normally do when contested by Randle. He has been solid helping in the paint all year despite his "T-Rex arms". His mobility, quickness, and positioning allow him to recover off his man to help the helper.
Randle's biggest contribution on defense is his ability to guard almost any player at any position. Some bigger guys like Embiid can take advantage of his lack of size, but Embiid will bully just about anybody. Julius does a great job at switching that often leads to an iso possession. According to Synergy, he allows just .854 PPP when defending isos which is in the 57th percentile. That may not seem great, but considering he defends that play type more than any other besides guarding the screener in PNRs, it is mightily impressive. Isolation plays are on average one of the least efficient play types in basketball.
With his ability to protect the paint well enough and switch onto smaller players on the perimeter, Randle puts himself in rare company. That is highly valuable in today's NBA because very few elite defenders have that combination. We are talking Joel Embiid, Anthony Davis, Paul Millsap, Draymond Green, Kevin Durant, Al Horford, Giannis Antetokounmpo, and maybe one or two other guys. That is about it. While Randle is not quite elite at both skill sets, he is very good at them and that alone makes him highly valuable. Sometimes it is better to be a B+ at every aspect instead of an A+ at a couple and a D+ at others.
Obviously, defense is far more complex than just switching and protecting the rim. It also includes closeouts, communication, boxing out, shading/playing angles, etc. According to Synergy in each play type that Randle defends a significant amount that includes P&R ball handler (whether it is defending the big or guard), isolation, P&R roll man, spot ups, post-ups, and off screens, Randle allows only above .9 PPP in one of those (spot ups at .942). That is incredible considering the worst offense in the NBA, the Sacramento Kings, average 1.013 PPP in total. Again, Randle's versatility allows him to defend multiple levels which makes him one of the most valuable defenders in the league.
seren wrote:I will ask an honest question. I am not trying to troll. How different is Randle compared to Kanter? I haven’t followed his career much. I went through their advanced stats and didn’t see anything that is particularly striking in Randle’s favor. He seems to have put numbers but it didn’t provide wins. The only difference seems to be his assist rate in his favor. Other stats like rebounding (especially offensive) is in Kanter’s favor. Any insights from those who followed the dude?