Negrodamus wrote:eyeatoma wrote:Negrodamus wrote:Posted this in a thread on the Draft Board, but throwing it here. Nothing really new if you read my ramblings on these threads, but really wanted to hammer home that Ace shares little with NBA All Stars when they were coming into the league.
I mean the people you said hit the mark are nearly all guards (for all three hitting the mark) apart form Tatum. Bailey is an SF/PF. Would be interesting if you included current players who play his position. The FTr and passing rate are typical of high scoring and good passing guards.
I went to the all time all stars wikipedia page, filtered by most recent, and chose all non-C players for the past 4 years until I saw Mike Conley's name and felt the point had been made.
For some reason it's considered cherry picking to choose a distribution stat, a foul generating stat, and FT% (which has historically been a good indicator of future jumpshot shooting in the NBA) when trying to figure out which of these prospects has superstar traits. What current players who play his position are you looking for? Non All Stars?
Just think data of all Forwards would be more pertinent. They probably exist, I just don't think gaurds who play a completely different position should really be compared with a 6-8 player, who is always going to be slower, and handle the ball less. That's not cherry picking, it's common sense. Also let's note that Bailey was not the one with the ball in his hands the most, that was Harper. The majority of players you've listed here are the center of the offense. I'd be more interested in seeing it compared to a 2nd or 3rd star. Not saying Bailey can't be a #1 player on a team, just think that is how he produced in college, and that was his role.
If you want to do this comparison I think there is value to also comparing his Highschool numbers which were through the roof. Could also compare the other players high school numbers just to be consistent..