theNBAnerd
Well-Known Member
Favors earns himself easy buckets by watching other players being aggressive. If getting easy possessions is so easy, why were 31% of Favors' possessions post-ups, which he completed at just 0.71 points per possession? How many plays per game can you run an effective P&R with Derrick Favors? How many plays per game can end in a transition opportunity for him? You're looking at, what, 10 possessions per game TOTAL? What happens on the rest of the possessions? What can you expect him to provide when the offense breaks down? When the defense is actually keying on him?
Even in much more favorable situations, which were largely created by other players, with less attention and worse opponents (off the bench), Al and Favors were roughly equally efficient scoring the basketball.
thing is, i don't disagree with any of this, but i still think the jazz need to focus more on favors. yes, he is far behind al in terms of post efficiency, but guess what -- that's exactly why i think that should be a priority. his best-case scenario is so obscenely higher than al's that it would be tragic if we don't capitalize on it. we gave up an all-NBA talent to get favors (and kanter, harris and the GS pick, but let's be honest: favors was the central point in that package), so i'm not ready to use his .71 ppp in the post as why he shouldn't play or get the ball down low. i'm using that as why this year should largely be about getting better in that aspect. we're not a title team this year, so we may as well start working on the future, even if that means enduring some growing pains while favors figures out the aspects of his game where he's not as strong.
and again, my original point was just that, overall, al is NOT more effective than derrick from a shooting perspective. yes, i said "keeps the ball" which begs for the inclusion of TOs, but that's not what i meant. i meant that it's a bit of a myth that al is more offensively capable as the shooter than favors/sap (or even kanter).