coldfish wrote:chefo wrote:coldfish wrote:
I don't expect Lauri to be Jokic on offense. I don't think that's fair. However, its not being realistic to just say that Lauri is acting like a normal off ball shooter. Kyle Korver didn't put the ball on the floor much and was a better shooter than Lauri, so everything you say about Lauri's shooting is more true about Korver. Despite that, Korver had a career 10.4% assist rate.
Just being on the floor with a bunch of offensive weapons like Lauri has around him should generate some assists by accident. The fact that Lauri is so low speaks to his inability or unwillingness to pass.
Again, before you say it, Korver was a better shooter than Lauri and had the role of being the recipient of passes and despite that, his assist rate was more than double Lauri's.
Lauri is more like Ryan Anderson. Ryan was also a terrible passer who either shot or just had a panic pass to an outlet man.
I'm not even going to argue that Lauri's a good passer, has decent vision or can even become one at any point in his career. I'm with you there--he doesn't pass much, if at all.
My main point of disagreement is that you seem to think that's a pretty big flaw in his game where I don't. I don't particularly want him to pass. As we can both agree--he's not really any good at it right now. I want him to do exactly what he's been doing--when he's close to the hoop and gets a pass--> dunk/layup; when he's open for 3--shoot it or drive it on a hard close-out. That's what he's been doing.
His lack of assists does not bother me, especially in the context that the ball does not stop when he's on the court. If he's not doing one of the above--he's handing it off to a guard pretty much on the spot or swinging it. Again, it's not about being Jokic--it's about being used in the areas he's good at and keeping him away from spots where he'll suck--and to me that includes him trying to create for others. Baby steps--maybe he has it in him (even if I haven't seen it yet), but I think what coach D has him doing is perfect for his current tool kit.
As for the Korver comparison-- Lauri is a blend of a pretty good shooter AND an elite rim-runner this year--and as much as Kyle was one of my favorites when he was here, he's only half of that equation, even if he was a superior shooter. What makes Lauri really valuable on O is the AND. If he were only one or the other, given his other deficiencies, he'd be just another role player that only deserves 20 min/game.
I have said this before so I apologize for repeating myself. You can break the game down to the following skills:
- On ball scoring
- Off ball scoring
- Playmaking (creating for others)
- On ball defense
- Off ball defense
- Rebounding
Your all time greats are good at most of that, but not all. Star level players are good at 3 or 4 of those things. Right now, Lauri is good at one. If he wants $20m per year, he has to make it 2 or 3 in order to justify that salary.
If you look around, teams like Chicago on a budget don't hand out $20m contracts like candy. That has to be your 3rd best player or possibly second. If Lauri wants around $10m, he can be the guy he is now and still be an asset.
I think we're getting back to extremes here, as you probably understand--you're not getting a hyper-efficient 20ppg scorer for $10M, even if he utterly sucks at everything else.
Your framework is a good starting point, but it needs a bit of nuance, especially in a team setting. For example, there are diminishing marginal returns as a team of having too many on-ball scorers. It's not a game of ISO and post-ups any longer. Even when it was, you rarely had more than 2 guys on any team who were good at it. Hopefully, a player can check both D boxes because otherwise you have to contort your schemes to hide him on D. As you point out, ideally a player is good at most of these things. In reality, very, very few players are.
So how does Lauri rank here?
- On ball scoring (meh)
- Off ball scoring (elite)
- Playmaking (creating for others) (puke)
- On ball defense (above-average)
- Off ball defense (poor, but at least making progress)
- Rebounding (average)
On each of these criteria, there's a wide range of outcomes, almost a slider--from abysmal to elite. If you're elite or close to it at anything in the NBA, you'll probably have a nice, long and well-paid career. Furthermore, the O criteria come as a package, IMO, where one elite skill is enough to override you being bad at the rest (say Klay, or Reggie Miller). Just because these guys can't create for others, or are not good at taking people one-on-one, doesn't mean they are not very valuable players on O.
If Lauri had to be a primary option right now, he wouldn't be able to do it... not without you having to run plays for him all night and he's not good enough to get that kind of system put in for him. However, given that the Bulls already have Zach who is in turn, elite, elite, average on O, that's not a pronounced flaw from the team's perspective.
Lauri needs to improve his help D, first and foremost, apart from staying healthy. To me that would make him a bargain at $20M, so long as he can keep it up on O.