RookieStar wrote:But isn't that what a PG is nowadays? Or at least what teams are actively looking for ala Dame, Wall, Trae and even Curry?
I mean sure you have great PGs like Fox and Murray and freaks like Ben and Luka.. but i feel PGs nowadays are more chucker like lol
It's a little more nuanced.
Yes, guys like Lillard, Young and Curry score a lot of points, but all of them (plus every other guy you mentioned) have a clear level of comfortability of running an NBA offense in the halfcourt. Those guys shoot/score a lot because they're great shooters/scorers, not because they can't or are unwilling to pass if that makes sense?
We just haven't seen much natural point guard ability from Anthony. Not at North Carolina and not in four preseason games. His natural inclination is to shoot/try and score dating all the way back to his high school/EYBL/All-Star circuit days. He's just doesn't look like a particularly comfortable or skilled passer.
That said...
He was a very efficient shooter/scorer in the preseason. Here's how he compares to some of the other guards drafted before and after him.
Edwards: .409 TS% on 38 FGA, 8 FTA
Ball: .373 TS% on 42 FGA, 8 FTA
Hayes: .402 TS% on 35 FGA, 8 FTA
Haliburton: .536 TS% on 22 FGA, 3 FTA
Lewis Jr: Played just 10 total minutes
Anthony: .598 TS% on 42 FGA, 9 FTA
Hampton: .379 TS% on 11 FGA, 2 FTA
Small sample size, but quite good!
If Anthony can have a .598 TS% like he did in the preseason (which is obviously unreasonable to expect for a rookie, but eventually), then it won't be a big deal if his PG skills are lacking because he'll be viable enough as an efficient shooter/scorer to play a lot and potentially even start with the right backcourt partner.