blargh wrote:J_T wrote:blargh wrote:Not sure I get all the Drummond votes. He’s a backup averaging 6ppg 8rpg in 18mpg: how empty could those stats be? He’s a legitimately elite rebounder: it’s not like he’s stealing boards from his teammates like Westbrook. And he’s been a great locker room guy while we had him in Philly.
I think people are mostly referring to his top rebounding seasons.
I think if people looked at those seasons and thought he was a star, that would have been on them. But his stats those years told exactly who he was: a historically great rebounder and an average scorer.
You obviously didn't see him play.
His rebounds came at the cost of rebounds from his teammates. He even admitted in an interview tgat he purposely elbowed his teammate in the face because they were stealing 'his' rebounds.
Of the rebounds he got there were 2 categories that made up the majority:
- uncontested defensive boards where teammates would just cede the rebound to him.
- rebounds from his own missed layups and putbacks. Nearly all of his offensive rebounds were from these. He would need 2 or three attempts just to make layups. This happened a few times each game.
For a historic rebounder he is shockingly bad at rebounding fundamentals like boxing out. He also is incredibly lazy on defense for large stretches of the game.
It's also telling that a team including a historic rebounder (the Pistons) were a subpar rebounding team as a whole for most of his tenure there. How on earth does that happen? Because he's vulturing them mostly from his teammates.
He was paid to leave 2 teams (Detroit and Cleveland). He was benched by the Lakers in what should have been his most important game of his career because of how badly he played the game before.
He then signed for the league
minimum the next year.
3 teams learned the hard way just how empty his stats really were.