mademan wrote:billy_hoyle wrote:mademan wrote:
eh, Green and Kuminga had an advantage in that they played the entire year in G-league in a similar format and against better comp.
Kuminga's case is actually hilarious. I remember telling people before the draft they were being too hard on him based solely on stats but he goes and puts up eerily similar stats up in summer league and for some reason his profile rose. This is literally who he was in the G-league. There's no reason to like him more or less based on his summer league play
I don't agree with your final point. Personally, I only watched highlights of g league games (likewise I only watched highlights of most college players games).
I hadn't seen what these dudes would look like against other high end players over the course of entire games.
Now I do, and in Kumingas case, I think he consistently shows flashes of physical explosiveness. Meaning, he's able to make alot of different types of plays at a high level.
That's an important point for me when I
make projections. Some guys look explosive in a certain narrow range of plays, being able to do it in many situations bodes well to me.
Im not sure what there is to disagree on. All i said was is that Kuminga was the same guy in G-league that he was in summer league, even tho everybody seemed super bearish on him.
G league: 16/7/3 on 46/25/63
Summer L: 17/6/2 on 37/28/65
I was one of the few people who was on this board saying that guys were too hard on him. He's inefficient but he's a big wing with good form on his shot and decent slashing ability. He can be crafted. I just have no idea why anybody would feel different about him if they watched G-league and summer league. He's the same player he was before the draft
Your point is, if I'm not mistaken, that people shouldn't change their opinion on Kuminga based on summer league.
You showed stats between the two leagues to make a case that nothing has changed.
I'm saying that entire premise doesn't make sense.
1. Because most people didn't get to watch full games prior to summer league. Even if they had, it wasn't against comparable competition
2. When comparing prospects highlight reels, it's important to know how often they are able to do these sort of athletic stand out plays. This is the 'everyone looks good in their highlights' point.
3. Cumulative numbers (averages, and efficiencies) don't convey or account for either of the points above.