
Be warned. This is pretty long. I hoped to organize it to keep it flowing but writing was my worst subject in school

-----
p36 minutes
Optimistic – 25p/12.5r/3a on 50/42, 65 TS%
Mean – 22p/11r/2.5a on 48/40, 60+ TS%
Pessimistic – 20p/10r/1.5a on 47/38, 57 TS%
Chicken Little – 20p/9r/1a on 44/36, 55 TS%
-----
As we all know Lauri has shown us potential of being great but it’s been muddled with inconsistency. Looking at his numbers overall, Lauri looks like an intriguing prospect but the numbers don’t really say “Future superstar” and his overall percentages are pretty disappointing for a 7 footer.
However, what’s funny is Lauri is consistently inconsistent in his play. I think we can get a baseline of “healthy” Lauri if we breakdown his two seasons so far into 10 portions. These portions are segmented based on his real life events and are the transition points for his inconsistency. I believe I have watched 90%+ of Lauri’s in game footage and to me there were clear distinctions in his playstyle/caliber between these portions but I will put in the disclaimer that the segmentation was based on (my) eye test.
The inconsistency was due to various factors:
- rookie wall
- back injury
- baby fatigue
- elbow injury
- death fatigue
All the following numbers are normalized to 36 minutes. I can share the spreadsheets I used to calculate these numbers (and other stats). Just ask.
-----
Let’s start with the rookie season:
Phase 1: Beginner’s Luck (14 games)
18.1p/9.3r/1.9a on 45/37, 58.5 TS%
Lauri came out of the gate strong for the first month. With adrenaline pumping, he was aggressive, efficient and setting rookie 3 point records.
Phase 2: Rookie Wall (11 games)
16.2p/9.7/.97a on 35/29, 45.4 TS%
Now with teams realized his talent level and the rush of the new season gone, Lauri went into a slump as most rookies do. These games could have included the beginnings of the back injury that held him out of 3 games after this phase
Phase 3: Back Injury (8 games)
19.9p/7.5r/1.7a on 43/34, 53.7 TS%
The back injury hindered him. He was playing better than his slump but you can see his rebounding declined (Still putting up nearly 20 ppg p36 though)
Phase 4: Solid Rook (14 games)
19.3p/9.6r/1.7a on 48/43, 61.6 TS%
This is when Lauri was pretty much over the back injury. I don’t know about fully healed but his numbers recovered to better than
Phase 1 numbers on better efficiency
Phase 5: Baby Fatigue (13 games)
15.1p/8.4r/0.6a on 41/24, 49.1 TS%
Lauri doesn’t play 3 games while his wife is giving birth. He comes back but there is something clearly off with him and that reflects in the numbers. Parents know how much fatigue newborns add. This phase spanned the first month of Baby Lauri’s life.
Phase 6: Flamethrower (9 games)
26p/9.2r/1.7a on 49/50, 64.3 TS%
Lauri sits out 5 games but when he comes back, he comes back with a vengeance. Most people following the bulls this season have already tuned out but this is where Lauri is given free reign and he decides to go off. This is what got me excited about his second season. He showed he can easily put up points.
Rookie Season Recap (36 “Healthy” Games):
20.1p/9.4r/1.8a on 47/42, 61 TS%
If you combine the stats for Phase 1, 4 & 6, you get the numbers above. Now these are numbers that show Lauri as a burgeoning superstar. They are very close to what I was expecting from Lauri’s sophomore season. My expectations were 20/10/2 on (47-48)/(38-40), (58-60) TS%
-----
*Bonus Phase*: Euro Finnisher (3 games)
25.3p/13.2r/2.5a(?) on 62.5 FG% (It was hard to find his stats from this)
Lauri (un)surprisingly came into these juiced up. Luckily for us Bulls fans, we got a sneak peak of what to expect next season as Lauri and looked to have taken a step up and gained some strength.
-----
Unfortunately, Lauri’s 2nd season was again consistently inconsistent. Let’s take a look:
Phase 1: Elbow Injury (6 games)
18.6p/8.1r/1.1a on 35/34, 46.1 TS%
Unfortunately, my hopes (and the team’s hopes) were dashed when Lauri suffered his elbow injury. It kept him out until December and when he did come back he didn’t look right. He was very passive/timid in gameplay and his normally beautiful shot was off. It can be seen with his very inefficient numbers.
Phase 2: Solid Soph (20 games)
19.9/8.3/1a on 46/41, 57.1 TS%
Slowly Lauri started to get into his groove. I think he could have recovered a lot faster and put better numbers up during these games if it wasn’t for all the external turnover and turmoil. There was still inconsistency but overall these were solid soph stats
Phase 3: Super Nova (14 games)
23.8p/12.9r/2.2a on 46/36, 60.4 TS%
“[Lauri]'d be gone till [February], then [February] came. Then [Lauri] came, right back on his worst behav'” -Drake probably
Hallelujah! This was the first sighting (of hopefully many!) of baby dirk. Lauri finally took over being a primary option and the Bulls decided to run a legitimate offense and look at that, we got results!
Lauri also put an emphasis on rebounding and the multi-ball hander offense allowed him to show peaks at his playmaking abilities. This month in my mind was a beta test for the upcoming season. What’s interesting to see is that the raw percentages weren’t all that high. He still had the best TS of all his career because of his increased foul drawing. This is what distinguishes good players from elite talents and we got a glimpse of it.
Phase 4: Fatigue Death (12 games)
19.2p/10.1r/2.1a on 38/29, 49.1 TS%
I don’t know how to explain it. Bulls said it was fatigue related and then he had a heart issue and was shut down. What was clear is his game fell off a literal cliff after the 4OT atlanta win. I don’t expect these numbers to continue and hopefully these issues are behind Lauri.
Soph Season Recap (34 “Healthy” Games):
21.7p/10.3r/1.5a on 46/39, 58.6 TS%
Now this is much more in line with what I was expecting from Lauri’s sophomore season. If you combine the stats for Phase 2 & 3, you get the numbers above. A “healthy” sophomore Lauri was putting up all-star numbers. His efficiency did dip a little bit from his rookie “healthy” stats however, he was assisted on a much lesser percentages of his shots. He had a lot less dunks & 3s and again he was recovering from a serious injury on his shooting elbow. He still upped his scoring & rebounding. Technically when he was allowed to, he did up his assisting (see bonus below) but he only had a small opportunity for it this season.
*Bonus: The Assisting Peak*
After talking with his Finnish coach this season, Lauri put more of an emphasis on playmaking. Along the same time, Boylen opened up the playbook and the offense was humming. During this stretch (18 games), Lauri averaged 2.5 assists. That’s not a huge amount but compared to his anemic ~1 assist during “unhealthy” games and ~1.7a during healthy games, it’s still a step up from what he was doing before. I think he can step it up even more but we have other players to do that now while Lauri can stick to scoring.
-----
Year 3 Outlook:
Rookie - 20.1p/9.4r/1.8a on 47/42, 61 TS%
Sophomore - 21.7p/10.3r/1.5a on 46/39, 58.6 TS%
“Healthy” games are technically cherry picking but I always wish for a full healthy season for all the Bulls players. Obviously, this is nearly impossible but I am really hoping for good consistent health for Lauri (knock on wood everyone). Now if Lauri stays healthy, here is what I predict his stats will be. He really needs to put these numbers up consistently for us to be satisfied.
Mean – 22p/11r/2.5a on 48/40, 60+ TS%
This is numbers with slight improvement across the board. Lauri gets more consistent with his shot, continues to be semi aggressive with rebounding and playmaking.
Optimistic – 25p/12.5r/3a on 50/42, 65 TS%
Superstar/MVP caliber season. This is with everything clicking for him. His shot becomes lethal. He is the center point of the Bulls. Fans rejoice in the second coming of Dirk. This might be a tad too optimistic but hey I needed to include my Lauri/Bulls fan bias

Pessimistic – 20p/10r/1.5a on 47/38, 57 TS%
This is if Lauri doesn’t improve and slightly regresses from the “healthy” stats. If he was consistently at this level we would still have a solid player but I think I would be disappointed since this would bring him further from a cornerstone trajectory. Usually third year players take a leap. If Lauri goes back something has gone wrong.
Chicken Little – 20p/9r/1a on 44/36, 55 TS%
If Lauri puts up his career averages consistently for a season, then something has gone terribly wrong. These are the numbers Lauri was putting up when you include the “unhealthy” games. I am expecting a leap in Lauri’s game this year so if he doesn’t show anything improved we have to question durability/reliability. Another year of inconsistency would definitely hamper his star credibility.
My POV – 23p/12r/3a on 49/40, 60 TS%
These are above the Mean prediction but less than the Optimistic. I am expecting at least the mean but I think we are going to be pleasantly surprised by Lauri this year. He just has to show damn consistency and stay healthy and I think we will see him attend his first All-Star game this year (along with hopefully Lavine).
-----
I wanted to do defense analysis but these past two years the team has been trash. I want to see a legitimate team play before I make more concrete judgements on that. From what I can tell, Lauri isn’t a lost cause, as long as you don’t expect big man rim protection. He just doesn’t have the length. His size helps him against guards/smaller forwards but anyone bigger can shoot over him in the post. I think his perimeter defense is above average (He was a positive 3 point defender last year. Maybe he can cover the weaker wing/“3” position when OPJ/Thad is on the floor (guarding the harder wing)?
This is a prediction thread for Lauri’s offensive stats. What are you guys expecting/hoping for?