. |
Considering Zion missed half the season in year 19/20, I think Randle would have done just fine at the same money we paid Favors for on a one year rental. Perhaps you forget; he played half a season with the "Looney Tune's Brow" who left for Lebron-land and Randle accounted for himself quite well (he didn't quit when others did). Spin it however you wish, he would've given us more than the four players we have been made to agonize through over the last two years (Favors, Melli, Adams, and JJ).
I’ll place this here apropos of nothing.
Bob Myers still with the realest commentary for why players with regular season success don't always thrive in the postseason. Failures are less confounding when you hear it. I go back to these words when some of best appear at their worst in the playoffs.pic.twitter.com/GhUPrAfdrm
— Michael Lee (@MrMichaelLee) September 11, 2020
It took me a while to understand this and when I see a fan get excited about a player or a team in the regular season, I can tell they are younger. Not that I am knocking that person, because its an evolution and I was once naive too. But I can go back decades and recite all the teams that played super hard and overachieved and then met reality in the postseason. Heck, Scott Skiles did it in multiple places.
There is no crossover. I have said they are different sports and I mean it. The closest you can get is to look at the final 4-6 minutes of regular season games in which nobody is at a massive rest disadvantage, guys are healthy, and both teams really need the game. If you could somehow isolate that, you might have a tiny glimpse into being able to predict what a guy and a team might do in the first round of the NBA playoffs. Then, do the same thing for the end of games in the first round and you might have a tiny idea of how a guy might perform in the 2nd and 3rd round.
So, when people quote all their stats and use that as evidence of this player being good or this one stinking, I just role my eyes because none of those stats matter with regard to what REALLY matters in this sport. Its all fluff.
@mcnamara247
I disagree that it's *all* fluff, because you still need guys with skill and you still need guys who are good in the last 4-5 minutes of a close game, which is the closest thing you can get to playoff basketball.
But, I will say that regular season stats without any semblance of context, is as meaningless as can be.
For example, Lonzo compiles the vast majority of his stats when the pressure is the least. He's an amazing 1st quarter player. Goes missing afterwards
Makes him look pretty great on paper, but we all know the truth
Last edited by AusPel; 05-29-2021 at 10:01 AM.
The stats are fluff. Filler. Things to keep fans talking and debating. The skills are whats real. The mental makeup is whats real. And we have almost no access.to the latter. Yet we debate these players as if we have all the info we need because we can go to basketball reference. Then, we call guys "overrated" when they fail in the playoffs, based of our own poor rating structure.
Look at the skills. Look at the effort and the willingness to do multiple things to help a team win. Dont look at the overall 3pt percentage with no context of when the shot was taken, how many dribbles vs open catch and shoot, etc. You are not an expert on these guys because you can work the basketball reference filter
Wouldn’t it be funny if Randle breaks out for 40 plus next game? Remember what happened after everyone got on Davis after that Lakers game one loss?
Last edited by AusPel; 05-29-2021 at 10:39 AM.
Because it is not like you have a large quantity of properly contextualized guys. We will come of these playifds with maybe 20 guys we know can thrive in the playoffs regardless of situation. Most guys are completely dependent on the situation and who they are playing off of.
Add to that, most humans are optimistic in that if they want to make a case for something, there is enough data to make that claim - as long as you selectively ignore other data.
Which is why i always start by making the argument opposite of what i want to believe. Always the best place to start
Last edited by As I See It; 05-29-2021 at 11:07 AM.
It's not hard to use a VPN or a TOR browser or some method to dynamically change your IP
One thing that's quite easily perceptible (which you can't hide) is the overt or subtle nuances of the way one uses the English language
Last edited by AusPel; 05-29-2021 at 11:26 AM.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)