Kobblehead wrote:Defensive Rebounding Percentage of projected 1st round PFs:
- Smith - 23.5%
- Sochan 20.6%
- Eason 20.5%
- Murray 19.9%
- Banchero 19.4%
- Liddell 18.6%
His rebounding is pretty ordinary.
Also, that career 68.8% free throw shooting through conference play is throwing a wrench into his shooting projection, for me. His shooting could go either way. I'm betting he shoots in the low 30%s, though
Yeah, he scored a lot of points, but he's going to be 22 in his first NBA game. Here's some other upperclassman aged players who scored over 20 ppg that played in Power Conferences in recent years: Max Strus, Tres Tinkle, Robert Franks, Myles Powell, Carsen Edwards, Markus Howard, Payton Pritchard, Luka Garza, Mason Jones, Ayo Dosunmu, Tyrell Brown, Scottie Pippen Jr, Devon Freeman-Liberty, Kofi Cockburn
Not exactly a feat that destines one for stardom.
pretty funny that you cherry picked defensive rebound percentage to make the point that he doesn't rebound well enough. the fact is his total rebound percentage is the second best on the list, just behind tari eason - 15.2 to 14.9. or do offensive rebounds not count as rebounding? iow, if Murray doesn't rebound well enough then none of them do and in terms of the draft order itself since they are essentially competing against each other, it's a non issue. then again you cherry pick his FT shooting in conference play, but ignore the rest of the season and you don't mention his 2pt FG shooting or his 3pt shooting, because as an overall shooter he shines in comparison to the other prospects. when you take FT shooting, FGs and 3pt FGs, his TS% is a career 63%. that is elite among these draft prospects. so again, if he doesn't shoot well enough, none of them do and it's a non issue.
dude, c'mon now. you can do better than cherry picking ultra specific stats to try and defend your point. it's okay to just admit you're wrong.





































