payitforward wrote:WizarDynasty wrote:TGW wrote:Much like Brandon Clarke last year, tankathon is basically saying Tyler Bey is a statistical beast.
Sorry.. Clarke and at t bey are not marion clones not even close. Look at S marion rookie year hip bend. Its how you move, and standing reach. This board loves guys with twigs for legs.
Twig legs dont have power to maintain hip bends mist of time. I wish someone would post some footage instead of stats against weak competition.
It's just obvious. Pay no attention to what guys actually accomplish on the floor. The games are decided by hip bend. Above all, never confuse what a guy like Clarke accomplishes, say at Gonzaga, against what is (obviously) weak competition. It's nothing like what a really gifted guy like Rui Hachimura accomplished against the tough competition he faced, at, you know, Gonzaga.
Similarly, when a rookie comes into the league, plays heavy minutes, & posts a TS% of 66.3%, how can you imagine that tells you anything compared to what the guy I like (hint -- his name is Rui) accomplishes in posting a TS% of 53.5%.
I mean... how can you compare those two guys in favor of the one who gets 30% more defensive rebounds, 25% more defensive rebounds, & blocks 6 times as many shots when you know his standing reach sucks. I mean... if he had the right standing reach, why... it would be significant -- but doing it without the right standing reach? What could be more obvious? -- It's totally insignificant!
Top tier highly value hip bend. Bottom feeders like the wizards and fanbase "us". Don't.
That's why ainge drafted Marion.
https://youtu.be/we0myBZ6kv0?t=181Learn from history. Don't repeat bigman mistakes made by the wizards. I can only lead you to the water.
https://www.nba.com/suns/history/rookie-no.-9The Pick
The team obviously didn't need to see Marion at summer camp to recognize his athletic ability. After studying film of him during his last season at Nevada-Las Vegas and bringing him in for a predraft workout and interview, the athleticism was obvious. He actually broke a couple of team records during jumping and running drills while visiting.
"He has the athleticism we talked about needing with our team," says Suns Head Coach Danny Ainge. "He has a knack of scoring around the paint. He can defend, he can play the shooting guard spot or he can play small forward."
In the months leading up to the draft, Marion's name wasn't widely known in the media or among fans. It was, however, on the speed dial of scouts and personnel people throughout the NBA. His draft status seemed to skyrocket from late-first-rounder to mid-firstrounder to lottery pick in a matter of weeks as he made the tour around the league for individual workouts.
"He's a guy that we had pegged for a while," Ainge says. "And the more we studied him, the more we talked and the more games we watched of all the players that were available in the draft, he just kept sliding up on everybody's list. Then he comes in here and has a great workout. We had one scout, one of our main scouts, who ranked him number one in the whole draft. So he's an intriguing player."
Intriguing, if not necessarily widely known.
"He may not have been as highly rated (as others in the draft), but that doesn't discourage us from rating players the way we feel they should be drafted," says Suns Executive Vice President and General Manager Bryan Colangelo.
"Our entire scouting department was in agreement that if we were able to get a guy like Shawn Marion (with the ninth pick), we were going to be very happy. We always try to come to a consensus about who is going to fit for us and Shawn Marion was that guy."
After coming to Phoenix in June, Marion began to get some inkling that the Suns were interested.
"Well, they liked me a lot when I came out here to work out," he says. "They had some of the top prospects in the draft up here and I did real well against them, I guess that made a big impression."
Enough of an impression for the Suns to make Marion their highest draft pick — a lottery pick obtained in a 1998 Draft Day deal which also brought Pat Garrity to Phoenix in exchange for Steve Nash — in over a decade. Heady stuff for a 21-year-old junior who passed up a chance to turn pro following his sophomore year at Vincennes University, a small junior college in Indiana, instead deciding to attend UNLV.
Build your team w/5 shooters using P. Pierce Form deeply bent hips and lower back arch at same time b4 rising into shot. Elbow never pointing to the ground! Good teams have an engine player that shoot volume (2000 full season) at 50 percent.Large Hands