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Blind Taste Test - Pick 3 Players

Pick 3 of these guys just based on per 36 stats:

  • Player 1

    Votes: 2 3.9%
  • Player 2

    Votes: 15 29.4%
  • Player 3

    Votes: 11 21.6%
  • Player 4

    Votes: 38 74.5%
  • Player 5

    Votes: 1 2.0%
  • Player 6

    Votes: 30 58.8%
  • Player 7

    Votes: 23 45.1%
  • Player 8

    Votes: 15 29.4%

  • Total voters
    51
Let’s compare his numbers since the trade deadline when he started getting regular minutes:

Per 36

16.5 PPG, 3.1 RPG, 2.6 APG

40/34/87 on 8.3 attempts from 3 per game

That is in his rookie year after a first half of the season where he wasn’t playing very much and didn’t play with a ton of playmaking.

Meanwhile you’re comparing him to players who have been in the NBA multiple years and four of whom play a lot of minutes for playoff teams.
 
HH literally was down on Ochai because he didn’t get enough stocks in his rookie season. Let’s not forget he said that.
 
Let’s compare his numbers since the trade deadline when he started getting regular minutes:

Per 36

16.5 PPG, 3.1 RPG, 2.6 APG

40/34/87 on 8.3 attempts from 3 per game

That is in his rookie year after a first half of the season where he wasn’t playing very much and didn’t play with a ton of playmaking.

Meanwhile you’re comparing him to players who have been in the NBA multiple years and four of whom play a lot of minutes for playoff teams.
Great! Totally valid analysis, even though it’s as or more cherry-picked than the thing you’re criticizing for cherry-picking. Added context: the Jazz were trying to lose those games. I also don’t know what to make of THT’s explosion because the context is lacking. Players tend to produce when lacking more proven options.

No one is saying Ochai sucks. I think the point of all of this as has been stated many times over is that maybe foregoing improving the team or the position due to the greatness of Ochai is a little overboard.
 
Here’s a fun exercise: find a hype-beast rookie that actually never panned out and imagine the counterfactual that they were traded at peak value:

What could the Warriors have gotten if they had traded Eric Paschall after his rookie season?

(OF COURSE you run the risk of trading a player that is just on the beginning of a growth curve! Of course it could be a mistake! That’s what makes the player conceivably valuable to other teams!)
 
Here’s a fun exercise: find a hype-beast rookie that actually never panned out and imagine the counterfactual that they were traded at peak value:
We are really letting the voice of like 1% of the internet sway us this much?
 
I don’t know what you’re saying.

EDIT: if you’re saying that there was no hype with Paschall, then I would point out that he was All-Rookie 1st Team
No, how is Ochai a hype-beast rookie?

Ochai is a role player who fits the modern NBA perfectly. He isnt comparable to freaking Eric Paschall.
 
Let’s compare his numbers since the trade deadline when he started getting regular minutes:

Per 36

16.5 PPG, 3.1 RPG, 2.6 APG

40/34/87 on 8.3 attempts from 3 per game

That is in his rookie year after a first half of the season where he wasn’t playing very much and didn’t play with a ton of playmaking.

Meanwhile you’re comparing him to players who have been in the NBA multiple years and four of whom play a lot of minutes for playoff teams.
I understand... and I said I get that he's a rookie... but if he does improve then it will likely look a lot like the players I listed and many are really meh. Like even the 16.5/3/3 is fine but at 40/34/87 that's really inefficient. So medium volume and below average shooting efficiency and not a lot of activity stats just doesn't scream "this guy needs to start next year". If he was a 19 yo rookie then okay... as a 22 yo rookie... its still fine but I'm still in wait and see mode.

For a guy who is "athletic, long" the activity stuff is REALLY low... even when he got minutes later in the season. Like not low for a rookie like Niang levels of low... so yeah those things aren't the things that generally double in a few years.... and they kind of need to unless he is like an efficient 17-18 ppg guy.

I just think its funny that if you mention him as a trade asset people lose their minds.
 
I understand... and I said I get that he's a rookie... but if he does improve then it will likely look a lot like the players I listed and many are really meh. Like even the 16.5/3/3 is fine but at 40/34/87 that's really inefficient. So medium volume and below average shooting efficiency and not a lot of activity stats just doesn't scream "this guy needs to start next year". If he was a 19 yo rookie then okay... as a 22 yo rookie... its still fine but I'm still in wait and see mode.

For a guy who is "athletic, long" the activity stuff is REALLY low... even when he got minutes later in the season. Like not low for a rookie like Niang levels of low... so yeah those things aren't the things that generally double in a few years.... and they kind of need to unless he is like an efficient 17-18 ppg guy.

I just think its funny that if you mention him as a trade asset people lose their minds.
The irony is the best player on the list is Norm Powell, an older rookie who also posted OK rookie year numbers similar to Ochai's and was also a low vote getter.
 
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