NatP4 wrote:Cunningham really didn’t play PG for Oklahoma state. He rarely brought the ball up the court or initiated offense. He was basically just an isolation wing scorer.
There’s no chance he busts, I don’t see Andrew Wiggins, but comparing him to Kevin Durant or James Harden is obnoxious. He had an 8 game stretch of shooting the lights out from 3, but even that % has been dropping through the last 9 games of the year(35%). He doesn’t finish at the rim against college defenders, he doesn’t have vision/playmaking, his defensive impact is average at best. 46% from 2pt and 109 turnovers to 94 assists is “based in reality”
I see a guy that puts up 20 points per game on 55% TS and is average on D, like Jayson Tatum or Brandon Ingram. Is that a top 30 player?
http://www.tankathon.com/players/compare?players=cade-cunningham--jayson-tatum
I stand by the comparison. To be honest, I really don't care about true shooting percentage. True shooting by itself doesn't tell you much. How does the player get the true-shooting percentage he gets. It something that can easily translate to the NBA or not. The comparison to Harden is apt because Cunningham can make step-back 3's with a level of consistency. The comparison to Kevin Durant in terms of shooting is apt because his shooting numbers are similar to KD's. Look at Cunningham's 3-point shooting and FT shooting.
There are multiple ways to get a high true shooting percentage. Your comparison rings hollow because while Cunningham, Tatum and Ingram are similar players, Cunningham is simply better. He's a vastly better shooter and when he comes into the NBA his ability to make 3's off the dribble will translate. KD's a better player, but the shooting is comparable. Ultimately, your analysis is flawed because it treats Cunningham like he's a finished project.
The truth is that this will just be Cunningham's starting point. Knocking him for his defense is silly. Cunningham has all the tools to be a good defender, it's up to a good coach and a good organization to bring that out. He can guard 1-4 easily and has a wingspan between 7'1 and 7'2. You can knock his vision/playmaking but the reality is that you're not even objective.
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He's a vastly better passer in college than Tatum, Ingram or KD.
https://www.audacy.com/cbssportsradio/sports/ncaa-basketball/osus-cunningham-resembles-magic-or-lebron-big12-coach-says“He’s like the closest I’ve really kind of seen to like a Magic Johnson or LeBron,” Beard said of Cunningham. “The best thing he does is pass, and then he can score and rebound and do all the other stuff, too. But to me, the ability to pass means you can anticipate, see things, you’re unselfish, you’re just wired right. The best players in the history of our game, they could pass… His passing ability, it’s like you’re out there with Magic or LeBron, if that makes sense... In my opinion, he’s the No. 1 pick and in my opinion, he’s an NBA All-Star one day.”
To be honest, reading your comments, I feel like you very biased against him for some reason. Does he need to improve his passing? Yes. But the reality is that Cunningham failures/turnovers were a result of trying to make the play. This is a big thing that people who focus solely on efficiency can't grasp. If you look at efficiency as a black and white entity, high efficiency is good/low efficiency is bad, than you'll completely miss the larger point. There are players like Cunningham who will have worse than ideal efficiency because they are attempting to make plays. For you, his turnovers are a negative, for me, it's an example of how a player is trying to grow and develop.
I'd much rather a young player fail while trying to make plays than have great efficiency while not even trying. When a young player fails, it's not even failing, it's learning. The problem with Tatum and Ingram is that now when they are 5 years in the league, they are finally starting to try to become playmakers. Needless to say I disagree completely with what you wrote about his playmaking. The reality is that a better shooting, better playmaking version of Jayson Tatum/Brandon Ingram should go first. And I'd argue that when you put Cunningham on a team where he doesn't have to carry a large scoring load, you'll see just how impressive his playmaking is. People who scouted him before college routinely threw out Magic and LBJ comparisons. He's the best player in the draft.