earthtone wrote:mdenny wrote:earthtone wrote:I don't think that's the best group of players for Scottie comps, but even then the gap isn't as wide as you're making it seem.
Over their first four seasons:AD | 20.8 PPG | 9.7 RPG | 1.7 APG | 57.4% TS
Embiid| 23.9 PPG | 11.5 RPG | 3.1 APG | 58.5% TS
Giannis | 14.9 PPG | 6.9 RPG | 3.6 APG | 56.9% TS
JJJ | 15.8 PPG | 5.1 RPG | 1.2 APG | 56.6% TS
Scottie | 17.2 PPG | 7.5 RPG | 5.0 APG | 54.1% TS.
Scottie's not a perfect player and of course the efficiency needs to improve, but I don't see the point in acting like he's finished with development. Every single one of those players above (and the vast majority of players who get rookie max extensions) improved their volume and efficiency as they enter their prime. Why is it unreasonable to project the same for Scottie?
This is perhaps the worst stat technique of all time.
The one where you could literally take EVERY 3rd amd 4th year player and say "hey...at that time they weren't so much different from a very finely selective group of previous players who took uniprecedented leaps and became hall of famers".
The trick is that you could take ANY ROTATIONAL PROSPECT and say the same thing.
I didn't choose those players or that method of comparison, just provided more context for the stats. And the point is that the leaps are the opposite of unprecedented. Good players don't peak on their rookie contracts, they continue to improve as they enter their prime.
Averaging 17/7/5 on your rookie contract is much closer to star-level output than 'average rotational prospect'.
You gotta stop watching Pensare man. He's a certified weirdo, and aside from him I don't think the 'Scottie cult' exists. Just people who like his game and don't think he's a completely finished product at 23.
Those numbers for a third and/or forth year prospect on a tanking team are actually horrendous as indicative of future star potential.
When you are "given the keys" and all the successful vets are traded away....you are supposed to put up much better numbers than that.
There were like 20 or 30 games where scotty was playing with a g league lineup and he was still putting up 16/6/6.
Future star players should be putting up like 24/8/6 when they are the primary focus of a tanking team with that much opportunity for usage.
Scotty plays like a role player when given the opportunity to play with a tanking team lol. So how would he be anything other than a role player for a 500 team? Nevermind a team that was plus 500.
Are we really trying to build a team around a role player?
Ingram is like 10 times more talented and skillful than scotty.