gpoon wrote:Kabookalu wrote:bon wrote:Boiling his MIP season down to just having more confidence is selling him short. You don't improve in every aspect of your game just by believing in yourself a little more. The spot up jumper and the isolation scoring were not in his arsenal at all in previous seasons.
Same goes for Derrick White. If he takes the next step with his game, it'll be because he added more range to his jumper, developed a tighter handle etc.. not mainly because he was "more confident". That confidence and the trust from coaches comes from putting the time in to develop the skills necessary to succeed in your role.
I'll give you the spot up jumper, but the ISO scoring was always there. He was taking guys off the dribble and posting people up his rookie year with the 905. And I vehemently disagree on your take, I think you're marginalizing how important self confidence is on a professional level. Being a Raptors fan you should know with Fred VanVleet.
Very different game the G league vs NBA, a lot of G league MVPs cant even get a role in the NBA so comparing what he did there is sorta irrelevant. Pascal in his second year was no where near as polished. He had the athleticism and speed to take guys off the dribble and post but he didnt have the ability to finish. His shot was not good at all from anywhere on the court in his sophomore year, but he developed a very respectable shot last year.
If we're to dismiss the showings of every single prospect to exist on a lower level then literally everything an NCAA player has done should be thrown out the window just because it's against inferior competition. No you literally can't take that player, throw him into the NBA, and expect him to replicate that without a hitch. Polish and adjusting those skills to be applicable against the best competition in the world is part of the growing pains, and for a lot of players it's a hump that's too hard to overcome. Pascal worked his ass off to get where he did.
My point is that people are acting like Pascal Siakam developed these skills overnight. I don't blame them for not knowing because who has time to watch the developmental team of the Raptors, I'm just telling everyone that yes he worked hard, but it didn't come out of the blue either. The footwork, the post ups, taking players off the dribble, he showed these skills off in the 905. No they weren't NBA ready yet, but he was working with a great base already, he just needed to continue working hard so that it'd be usable against the best of the best. And I don't doubt that he improved on these skills already, but it's not like he started from level 1 to level 60. Those few of us that watched the 905 knew what he was capable of. We weren't all certain that he'd be a surefire star, but if he did it wouldn't have surprised us.





















