payitforward wrote:I am always happy when you are around & posting, CCJ. A good thing!
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payitforward wrote:I am always happy when you are around & posting, CCJ. A good thing!
gambitx777 wrote:We all are! We may not always get along but we are one big wizards family !payitforward wrote:I am always happy when you are around & posting, CCJ. A good thing!
 
                    
                                      
                    
                    
               payitforward wrote:gambitx777 wrote:We all are! We may not always get along but we are one big wizards family !payitforward wrote:I am always happy when you are around & posting, CCJ. A good thing!
What's this "not always get along" thing! I get along with everybody.
The way I do it, I make sure only to argue with my favorite guys.
Dark Faze wrote:What's the general take on Nerlens Noel these days? Rated 6th at RPM for his position and will be a free agent. Would he be worth a full MLE?
Dark Faze wrote:What's the general take on Nerlens Noel these days? Rated 6th at RPM for his position and will be a free agent. Would he be worth a full MLE?
 
                                                                                                          gambitx777 wrote:I still like Bryant to Boston in some trade for some picks just my opinion .
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               payitforward wrote:Dark Faze wrote:What's the general take on Nerlens Noel these days? Rated 6th at RPM for his position and will be a free agent. Would he be worth a full MLE?
I'd say absolutely yes he would be. I'd be happy to sign him for the full 4 years if he'd go for it.
&, in that case, I would trade Wagner. He doesn't have a whole lot of value, but you'd get something for him.
Shoe wrote:gambitx777 wrote:I still like Bryant to Boston in some trade for some picks just my opinion.
I don't imagine he has trade value unless Boston can pinpoint why he regressed and have a solution for it.
 
                                                                                                          payitforward wrote:Shoe wrote:gambitx777 wrote:I still like Bryant to Boston in some trade for some picks just my opinion.
I don't imagine he has trade value unless Boston can pinpoint why he regressed and have a solution for it.
Bryant had a slow start to the season. Over the last couple of months he has, bit by bit, moved his numbers back up towards last season's level -- tho he won't get there for the season as a whole, precisely b/c of the slow start.
Yet, overall, to this point, how much has he regressed?
Rebounding: Bryant's defensive rebounding is slightly down, while his offensive rebounding is slightly up. These guys are not machines, they're people. Keep in mind that this year like last year he's significantly above an average NBA big in both.
Scoring: Bryant is scoring exactly as many points as last year (he's plus @ .1 pt. per 40 minutes). But, he's taking .17 more shots & .4 more FTAs, so his TS% has dropped from 67.4% to "only" 65.9%. Keep in mind that he's scoring more points than an average NBA big & that his TS% is way above that of an average NBA big (57.8%).
Assists: his assists per 40 minutes are up about 27% from last year. He delivers more assists than an average NBA big.
Fouls: his fouls are up @10%, so that this year he's fouling at an exactly average rate for an NBA big.
He's blocking more shots than an average NBA big, & he turns the ball over at the average rate for an NBA big.
In short, this year his numbers, while not quite as stellar as last year, are once again extremely good. Moreover...
Thomas Bryant is still 22 years old -- younger than some guys who will get drafted three months from now.
He's playing in, effectively, his 2d year (72 minutes as a rookie).
He hasn't yet posted even 2500 NBA minutes overall.
Tell me, are you really sure that this is the description of a player who has no trade value?
I didn't think so.
 
                                                                                                           
                                                                                                          payitforward wrote:He needs to improve his defense. But... you're full of it. A statement with nothing behind it.
Once again, Thomas Bryant is six months & 1 week older than Rui Hachimura.

 
                    
                    
                    
                                                    Meliorus wrote:payitforward wrote:He needs to improve his defense. But... you're full of it. A statement with nothing behind it.
Once again, Thomas Bryant is six months & 1 week older than Rui Hachimura.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't centers generate less points per possession than wings? Wouldn't it be more efficient to just give all of the center offensive possessions to a wing (who shoots more threes)? I think the question to ask here is: is there any point in having a good offensive center? Or is it better to have a center who takes almost no shots and just plays defense?
 
                                                                                                          Ruzious wrote:Meliorus wrote:payitforward wrote:He needs to improve his defense. But... you're full of it. A statement with nothing behind it.
Once again, Thomas Bryant is six months & 1 week older than Rui Hachimura.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't centers generate less points per possession than wings? Wouldn't it be more efficient to just give all of the center offensive possessions to a wing (who shoots more threes)? I think the question to ask here is: is there any point in having a good offensive center? Or is it better to have a center who takes almost no shots and just plays defense?
Ok, look at the Lakers roster. Bryant's 3rd on the current roster in points per possession. He and Wagner are tops on the team in TS% at 66% while all-star scorer Beal is at 57.8%. He's shooting 60.1% from the field. Next best is Beal at... 47.6%. He's also the top rebounder on the team at 10.3 per 36. He's got the 2nd highest PER on the team behind Beal - over 3 points ahead of the 3rd highest. He's been playing hurt - that's why his minutes are restricted and he can't play consecutive days. He's still an inexperienced young player. Give him more time to develop his defense. Look at the rosters of the 2 best teams in basketball.
payitforward wrote:Shoe wrote:gambitx777 wrote:I still like Bryant to Boston in some trade for some picks just my opinion.
I don't imagine he has trade value unless Boston can pinpoint why he regressed and have a solution for it.
Bryant had a slow start to the season. Over the last couple of months he has, bit by bit, moved his numbers back up towards last season's level -- tho he won't get there for the season as a whole, precisely b/c of the slow start.
Yet, overall, to this point, how much has he regressed?
Rebounding: Bryant's defensive rebounding is slightly down, while his offensive rebounding is slightly up. These guys are not machines, they're people. Keep in mind that this year like last year he's significantly above an average NBA big in both.
Scoring: Bryant is scoring exactly as many points as last year (he's plus @ .1 pt. per 40 minutes). But, he's taking .17 more shots & .4 more FTAs, so his TS% has dropped from 67.4% to "only" 65.9%. Keep in mind that he's scoring more points than an average NBA big & that his TS% is way above that of an average NBA big (57.8%).
Assists: his assists per 40 minutes are up about 27% from last year. He delivers more assists than an average NBA big.
Fouls: his fouls are up @10%, so that this year he's fouling at an exactly average rate for an NBA big.
He's blocking more shots than an average NBA big, & he turns the ball over at the average rate for an NBA big.
In short, this year his numbers, while not quite as stellar as last year, are once again extremely good. Moreover...
Thomas Bryant is still 22 years old -- younger than some guys who will get drafted three months from now.
He's playing in, effectively, his 2d year (72 minutes as a rookie).
He hasn't yet posted even 2500 NBA minutes overall.
Tell me, are you really sure that this is the description of a player who has no trade value?
I didn't think so.
For Gods sakes, Thomas Bryant is six months & 1 week older than Rui Hachimura!
 
                                                                                                          
 
                    
                    
                    
                                                    Meliorus wrote:Yea watching this Knicks game and just see their players going at Bryant in the paint. Guys like Ntiklina looking like an All-Star.
Meliorus wrote:payitforward wrote:He needs to improve his defense. But... you're full of it. A statement with nothing behind it.
Once again, Thomas Bryant is six months & 1 week older than Rui Hachimura.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't centers generate less points per possession than wings? Wouldn't it be more efficient to just give all of the center offensive possessions to a wing (who shoots more threes)?...