NoDopeOnSundays wrote:Clyde_Style wrote:Writing the script on Mitch's future before you even get to see what Thibs and Payne and crew can do with Mitch is pointless IMO.
Not a single one of us knows what Mitch is going to be in 18-24 months. The guy is still super raw, yet super effective at what he does.
And if we do start to put solid three point shooting around Mitch then that rim running actually creates major spacing advantages. Recall how many defenses started sagging to stop Mitch from rolling to the rim and they still could stop not him from doing it or from scorring on putbacks.
When you have shooters and a threat like Mitch it spreads the defenders and keeps them guessing. That's what the right players and good coaching will do with a guy like Mitch even if his offensive range remains limited. It doesn't have to be him who is the three point threat as long as those threats are on the floor with him. It'd be nice if he can pop long, but it is not required with the right players and good schemes.
Instead of always trying to mimic the league, perhaps we should be acknowledging what a gem Mitch is and building with him in mind. He will start hitting bunnies. Maybe he'll shoot threes too. But just as important to his development will be his ability to draw defenders and make the right read on whether to make his move or pass to an open man on the weak side. I'm more concerned about his passing IQ than his jump shot really. That's why coaching will be critical before we judge his long-term potential to its fullest
I'm fairly confident in knowing what Mitch will be, I just don't see how he's any different than any number of rim rollers that have been in the league the last 15 years. He's not a better player at 21 than Andre Drummond was at the same age, and look at how that turned out for the Pistons, gave him the keys and maxed him out. He's still a rebounding monster, yet has no real place in the league now and got traded for a Microsoft Zune. The Rockets put so much shooting around Capella, and still traded him because ultimately in a playoff series good teams will switch on the screen and take their chances with a player like that trying to score against a big wing in the post.
I'm concerned about his entire offensive skillset, I've seen nothing from him that makes me think there's some versatile offensive player hiding in there. If he were a good freethrow shooter I'd be more confident about his potential to improve, but he's pretty poor from the line. I don't want to mimic the league, just the Celtics (Scoring pg, 3 big wings and a low salary center who can shoot/switch onto wings), do you think if 3 years from now that Brad Stevens wouldn't be able to gameplan someone like Mitch off the floor, assuming Mitch is a 13ppg, 14rpg type of guy.
I don't share your confidence at being able to predict so accurately his trajectory. I want to see what happens and then decide. There's time on his current dirt cheap deal and his value could increase significantly still, so I see no purpose in packaging him now. I don't even want to plan on it later. I'll leave those trade scenarios to you
but, hey, feel free to hitch a ride on the Mitch train anytime

but whatever you do, watch out for cattle crossings