lilfishi22 wrote:bwgood77 wrote:Jstock12 wrote:
You need to look at the DFG differential to spot any improvements since every opponent has a different season average.
Where do you find all these numbers? Like the ones you posted earlier. Do you have a link?
What's interesting is of the bigs (over 6'10) who have played more than 20 NBA games this season, Holmes rank #1 (-18 Diff%)
https://stats.nba.com/players/defense-dash-lt6/?sort=PLUSMINUS&dir=-1&CF=GP*GE*20&Season=2018-19&SeasonType=Regular%20Season&Height=GT%206-10Obviously it's over a smaller sample size of just 3.3 attempts per game at the rim but I think it's clear how good he is at just changing shots at the rim.
Ayton is still giving up too much at the rim (65.4%) but it was much better than where he was earlier in the season when he was giving up like +70% IIRC. Since the start of Dec, he's at around 63.3%. Still a poor rim protector but there's improvement
I think these stats need some context.
Holmes is currently a better rim protector than Ayton. That's not up for debate, IMHO. But Holmes usually faces the second unit centers and the second unit offenses. In stretches where he had to faced opposing team #1 centers, Holmes struggled more often than not. Against second unit offenses/centers (limited sample), Ayton has looked much better than against opposing starting lineup. Holmes is better for sure but the gap isn't as wide as the number suggest.
A huge issue regarding Ayton's rim protection is related to strength. Against stronger centers he's not strong enough to defend the post/rim and his DFG against them looks to be extraordinarily high. First matchup against Bogan, DAJ was 5/5 last night and also did well in their first game, Steve Adams missed like a one shot against Ayton on good volume in their two games, Jokic obviously, Nurkic when he was posting up, same with Vuvecic, etc. It will take Ayton some time before his strength matches or exceeds these bigger centers, I think his DFG % will dropped sharply when that occur.
Lastly, the issue with small sample size is you can reach markedly different conclusion pretty quickly. His December stats (63.3%, which includes only 6 games) suggest he's still a poor rim protector. His last ten games (excluding DAL, i.e.TheTimelinePodcast stats of 56%) suggest elite rim protection. Based solely on the eye test, i think it's somewhere in between: average to above average rim protection.
I know its blasphemy on this forum to suggest Ayton is going to be an elite defender, but I think he's going to be a top ten defensive center in this league. His PNR defense looks fantastic recently; his rim protection has been average/above average; and he's one of the few centers than can switch on guard (Embiid and Gobert struggled with this during the playoff) which is an underrated aspect for the 5 position in this league. Color me optimistic.