DatHomieYouHaTe wrote:This poor guy has no spacing still in 2024.. Horrible roster construction.. He is playing in hard mode on our current team... Guess it's good for tanking
IQ, Dick, JaKobe, and Kelly were not playing.
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DatHomieYouHaTe wrote:This poor guy has no spacing still in 2024.. Horrible roster construction.. He is playing in hard mode on our current team... Guess it's good for tanking
Raps in 4 wrote:DatHomieYouHaTe wrote:This poor guy has no spacing still in 2024.. Horrible roster construction.. He is playing in hard mode on our current team... Guess it's good for tanking
IQ, Dick, JaKobe, and Kelly were not playing.
Airmiess wrote:His trajectory has changed with the quick release from range and midrange. I can say hes on Siakam tier now.
ATLTimekeeper wrote:Airmiess wrote:His trajectory has changed with the quick release from range and midrange. I can say hes on Siakam tier now.
I dunno, Siakam would cook Georges Niang so bad he would hit the bench and no one would talk to himScottie couldn't get by him. Scottie said he just worked on his midrange package, but his handle is still too weak for what we want him to be.
Anyway, this is still an upward trajectory. Lots of time left in his career to improve.

Scase wrote:RJ was too much dead weight to carry![]()
Scottie should've had an easy trip dub if anyone on this team could shoot.
Thaddy wrote:The most important piece would be a stretch big. This would make Barnes a lot more dangerous in the mid post. The good thing is that Barnes is being conditioned as a scorer since he's relying on weaker parts of his game. Bringing the ball up as the PG and then initiating offense with a live dribble isn't his strong suit but he's getting in reps.
Ideally I would want someone like IQ bringing up the ball and dumping it in the mid post to Barnes from where he can play a Carmelo Anthony type of game in the half court. Otherwise I want Barnes to push the ball in transition. A stretch big prospect that makes the right plays on the floor is what we need. I'm thinking that's going to be Rocco Zikarsy a few years into development.

anotherhomer wrote:he's still a boris diaw, draymond green type mode of player, but a really good version
tsherkin wrote:
I honestly think Scottie's future is as a 4. Sometimes advancing the ball when he grabs a DRB, often times giving it up if there isn't some early action, only to get it back in the mid-post. Parlaying his size, going after defenders who aren't so fast relative to him, that sort of thing. IF we're to return to Melo, more like New York Melo, he was a shorter 4 with a 3 at the time and it worked out quite well. And that actually opens the door to more spacing faster, assuming that Poeltl's off the floor when we run Barnes that way. And then when Poeltl is back on the floor, back to business as now so we don't clog the paint.

manjusaka wrote:tsherkin wrote:
I honestly think Scottie's future is as a 4. Sometimes advancing the ball when he grabs a DRB, often times giving it up if there isn't some early action, only to get it back in the mid-post. Parlaying his size, going after defenders who aren't so fast relative to him, that sort of thing. IF we're to return to Melo, more like New York Melo, he was a shorter 4 with a 3 at the time and it worked out quite well. And that actually opens the door to more spacing faster, assuming that Poeltl's off the floor when we run Barnes that way. And then when Poeltl is back on the floor, back to business as now so we don't clog the paint.
I too, thought he is best suited at 4. However, the way he is been playing on the offensive end and things he is working on, are sg/sf stuffs. I actually think he’s shooting form look a whole lot better than his rookie year. He turned his back towards the basket quite often, the turnaround jumper that he is working on can a go to move we are hoping for. I know it’s a difficult move to master, but it is a really good go to move.
tsherkin wrote:anotherhomer wrote:he's still a boris diaw, draymond green type mode of player, but a really good version
I think he has more potential as a scorer than that. Draymond Green is basically an oxygen-thief if you ask him to score. Barnes at least shows that he has some tools, some improvement, some potential to score effectively. A night like last night, he didn't hit his shots well, BUT he generated like 14 or 15 of his 26 shots in the paint (1 was technically just outside, but was right on the mid-block).
That's significant. He's not going to shoot 7/15 on those every time. He's a career 71% shooter inside 3 feet and 46.2% from 3-10. Now, 7/15 is 46.7% or so, but he was 3/8 in the RA last night. That isn't going to keep happening every night. So if he can keep bullying his way to the rim, he's gonna eventually start hitting those more consistently.
And that separates him from Diaw and Green. Not a bad reference as far as passing potential and size, of course, but he's got more juice than either as a scorer, even if he's struggling at the moment.
tsherkin wrote:manjusaka wrote:tsherkin wrote:
I honestly think Scottie's future is as a 4. Sometimes advancing the ball when he grabs a DRB, often times giving it up if there isn't some early action, only to get it back in the mid-post. Parlaying his size, going after defenders who aren't so fast relative to him, that sort of thing. IF we're to return to Melo, more like New York Melo, he was a shorter 4 with a 3 at the time and it worked out quite well. And that actually opens the door to more spacing faster, assuming that Poeltl's off the floor when we run Barnes that way. And then when Poeltl is back on the floor, back to business as now so we don't clog the paint.
I too, thought he is best suited at 4. However, the way he is been playing on the offensive end and things he is working on, are sg/sf stuffs. I actually think he’s shooting form look a whole lot better than his rookie year. He turned his back towards the basket quite often, the turnaround jumper that he is working on can a go to move we are hoping for. I know it’s a difficult move to master, but it is a really good go to move.
Right, but having a handle and some tools isn't exclusive from the idea of being a 4. And I think athletically, he'll match up better there. And yes, I absolutely agree that if he can get a handle on the turnaround J, it'll be amazing for him. He has excellent power, so he should be abusing that for quality position. He just needs a reliable go-to move in that space, and it doesn't much look like a spin or slashing out of triple-threat is the focus. So he needs to really work on the pull-up and turnaround jumpers. Old Jordan kind of stuff.

anotherhomer wrote:[
i mean i agree he has the chance to become more than Diaw and Green, but right now, he's still in the same mold just more talented obviously
manjusaka wrote:
His size and strength doesn’t really have advantage at4. At 3, it is an all different story.
tsherkin wrote:anotherhomer wrote:[
i mean i agree he has the chance to become more than Diaw and Green, but right now, he's still in the same mold just more talented obviously
My point was that Draymond is a waste of skin as a scoring threat. Scottie, for all my many criticisms of him, has a chance to not be that. Diaw was okay, but he was a very limited guy on that front as well. They don't match style of play at all, other than being quality playmakers of a similar size. And Barnes has more power to his game than either.manjusaka wrote:
His size and strength doesn’t really have advantage at4. At 3, it is an all different story.
He's actually still pretty burly at the 4, and then he trades a little of his strength advantage for a mobility advantage against most 4s. And it would be easier to space around him that way. Scottie's not a small guy; he's pretty stocky even for the 4. There are a fair number of 6'10, 6'11 dudes who are pretty skinny. Think of putting him against Pascal; he'd bully the hell out of him.

manjusaka wrote:You are underestimating Pascal, he is listed 6-8 245lbs on the nba.com right now. SB is listed 6-7 237lbs.
Pascal wingspan 7' 3.25' standing reach 8' 11.5''
SB Wingspan 7'2.75'' standing reach 9.
manjusaka wrote:tsherkin wrote:anotherhomer wrote:[
i mean i agree he has the chance to become more than Diaw and Green, but right now, he's still in the same mold just more talented obviously
My point was that Draymond is a waste of skin as a scoring threat. Scottie, for all my many criticisms of him, has a chance to not be that. Diaw was okay, but he was a very limited guy on that front as well. They don't match style of play at all, other than being quality playmakers of a similar size. And Barnes has more power to his game than either.manjusaka wrote:
His size and strength doesn’t really have advantage at4. At 3, it is an all different story.
He's actually still pretty burly at the 4, and then he trades a little of his strength advantage for a mobility advantage against most 4s. And it would be easier to space around him that way. Scottie's not a small guy; he's pretty stocky even for the 4. There are a fair number of 6'10, 6'11 dudes who are pretty skinny. Think of putting him against Pascal; he'd bully the hell out of him.
You are underestimating Pascal, he is listed 6-8 245lbs on the nba.com right now. SB is listed 6-7 237lbs.
Pascal wingspan 7' 3.25' standing reach 8' 11.5''
SB Wingspan 7'2.75'' standing reach 9.
tsherkin wrote:Scase wrote:RJ was too much dead weight to carry![]()
Basically no one shot well last night. Scottie was 12/26.
Poeltl was 4/11. Mitchell was 1/7. Barrett was 7/19. Agbaji was 0/4. Shead was 3/9.
Now, Boucher was 4/9, Fernando was 4/7, Battle was 4/9 and Mogbo was 2/3. That was something. But the team as a whole shot 39%, and Scottie was bringing that up some even on a bleh night.
What I did enjoy about Scottie was that he was hammering it in the paint in the second half. He cooled off significantly after the second quarter, but he was like 4/10 in the paint in the second half. 10 shots in the key is a pretty big deal, even against a squad like Detroit. He was aggressive, he was finding his way to the right places, he just couldn't finish late. And he had no support, really, so we couldn't weather those misses.
