INFORMER wrote:
Beautiful looking jump shot. Gives me some hope.
I keep watching UVA games trying to imagine him being an NBA player, and I just can't see it. Too slow. Too mechanical. I would love to be wrong.
He's really slow. Nash was at least average in regards to foot speed. I am not sure it's something he can improve either. It could be he is destined do be a backup PG in the 15 mpg mold.
INFORMER wrote:
Beautiful looking jump shot. Gives me some hope.
I keep watching UVA games trying to imagine him being an NBA player, and I just can't see it. Too slow. Too mechanical. I would love to be wrong.
He's really slow. Nash was at least average in regards to foot speed. I am not sure it's something he can improve either. It could be he is destined do be a backup PG in the 15 mpg mold.
I would say that Nash was distinctly below average in his speed. What he did have was a good burst of acceleration, the ability to lull the defender into thinking he was even slower than that before putting on a small burst of speed to get a bit of separation. But Nash was really unathletic and relied heavily on his cleverness and on screens to get open for shots.
As for the video: I watched it and enjoyed seeing him hit so many 3s. What do you think of his shot form? It looks to me like he has a low release point. This isn't a deal-breaker, and it reminds me of Steph Curry's form a bit.
Same criteria to select players but as we want to guess what Warren's next 3 years might look like, comparing 3 year periods to 3 year periods makes sense, so:
-The first 2 years of each players data is removed leaving three years of data. This also removes the rookie adjustment period pretty well.
- This is compared against the next 3 yrs of data (so yr 6 > yr 8 for each player); this means a career has to be at least 8 years long. This also removes the impact of career ending injuries, which Warren doesn't have.
- If a player is active (applies to Khris Middleton only) then he doesn't need to have 8 years.
- Number of games played is likely to go down
- Player output for years 3 > 5 is a pretty good proxy for yrs 6 > 8 output
Conclusion:
- It will all come down to his health as to who wins the trade but it's not as one sided as it might appear...Suns fans might be overvaluing their asset in other words - or actually the same words I used before I did all this analysis (so I could also conclude I have just wasted a large part of my Saturday...)
Walton is an interesting case. He suffered a stress fracture in his ankle during the playoffs against Seattle on 4/21/78, missing the entire 1978-79 season with Portland. Then he became a free agent in 1979 and signed with his hometown San Diego Clippers where he fractured his foot during the 1979 preseason, causing him to miss most of the 1979-80 season with Walton playing only 14 games late in the season.
His ankle and foot problems continued as he missed the next two seasons, enrolling in Stanford law school while recuperating. Walton returned in 1982-83 with instructions from his doctor not to play in more than one game a week, and appeared in 33 games, which increased to 55 and 67 the following two seasons.
By mutual consent (the Clippers didn't want to play him and Walton wanted to play for a winner) he was traded to Boston in 1985 where he could play fewer minutes as the backup for Robert Parish and Kevin McHale. Walton played a career-high 80 games in 1985-86 for the Celtics as they won the NBA title, but was injured again in 1986, missing the 1986-87, 1987-88 and 1988-89 seasons before abandoning a comeback attempt during the 1989-90 season.
In the 16 years between his being drafted by Portland and his retiring in 1990 he averaged a total of 29.25 games a season.
When he was relatively healthy in Portland Walton was the best defensive big man in the league, the 2nd best rebounder (after Moses Malone), a terrific passer and probably the second-best player after Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. If he had been born with good feet he may have spent his entire career in Portland and would be considered one of the greatest players in league history. Unfortunately, we only got to see a very small slice of that.
Author of The Basketball Draft Fact Book: A History of Professional Basketball's College Drafts
Available from Scarecrow Press at - https://rowman.com/ISBN/9780810890695
Well before my time but that's what I heard, he could have been one of the greats. Got the impression he was quite the indulger in his spare time; pot, acid etc... dude loved a tie-die t-shirt.
For the stats, to follow the trend of trying to make same similar period comparisons I compared his 3 >5 yrs with 8 > 10 yrs rather than (6 > 8) as both periods had one entire year out to injury and similar games played for the other two.
Wow, so I made a pretty huge error that changes the conclusion just as hugely - I referenced the 3 year periods back to front, plus I found a couple other cell errors as well.
Rule of working with data? Always check your work, which I didn't as had to rush to the office last minute annoyingly.
- TJ's number of appearances are likely to go UP not down based on average historical data, and this is far more likely if you think he was mailing it in last season, which would indeed suggest we've traded away an asset for below market value.
Still, in the name of team dynamics, and to add a new angle doing the right thing by players i.e. they leave happy rather than bad mouthing us, a common trait of the McDonut era, let's just hope we don't get too badly burned.
That was the first thing that popped into my head when I saw that he was playing. Maybe for Euros it's good to have them play in the summer so they don't get fat.