Chaz
observationist
cheesebeef said:See... there - all of a sudden a JJ thread is about Shawn Marion!
Thanks Cheese!
What was the question again?
Is this thing on? :tapsmicrophone:
cheesebeef said:See... there - all of a sudden a JJ thread is about Shawn Marion!
elindholm said:alright, so exactly what is YOUR point? i stated my point to you, and you disagree with it, thats fine. are you saying that taking it strong to the hoop is not required to be called great?
Yes, my point is that taking it strong to the hoop is not required to be an elite player. I'll leave out the question of "complete," since your standard for that is impossibly high. If only one player a decade can be "complete," then no, Johnson isn't it.
how do you quantify efficiency? i quantify it through adjusted field goal % and points per shot, along with the ability to self-create the shots one takes.... {and} the ability to take it strong to the hoop (you don't have to do it every time, just have the ability). JJ doesn't have this.
I'd say that's a reasonable way of quantifying it. It would be nice to figure assists into it somehow, but I'll leave that chore to the guy who writes those fastidious analyses for Insider.
Since Jordan isn't playing anymore, we can't do a direct comparison of his efficiency to Johnson's. But my guess is that Johnson's is comparable to the league's current elite wing players. Remember that since he shoots threes so well, his points per shot statistic gets a big boost.
Also, it's not true that Johnson "doesn't have" the ability to throw it down in traffic. It has happened a couple of times this season -- plays that made me go "Wow, I didn't realize Johnson could do that!" I don't remember the circumstances, but there have been some very authoritative, extremely aggressive plays, taking it right at the defense. Maybe someone else following this discussion -- if there's anyone left, that is -- can refresh my memory.
Of course he does not do it nearly as much as someone like Jordan, and it would be better if he did it more. Maybe in a year or two, if he stays with the Suns and becomes the #2 offensive option, we'll see more of it.
playstation said:hogging the ball is one thing, taking it strong to the rim is another. you can attack the hoop without being selfish.
Ouchie-Z-Clown said:the fact that after three years of watching him you can still say "wow, i didn't know he could that" proves that he can't do it consistently.
cheesebeef said:See... there - all of a sudden a JJ thread is about Shawn Marion!
yotes1921 said:the fact that after three years of watching him you can still say "wow, i didn't know he could that" proves that he can't do it consistently
Not true, it proves that he doesn't not that he can't
Suns_fan69 said:You can also attack the rim without dunking. This argument started out about dunking and then morphed into attacking the hoop; these are 2 completely seperate things.
Shawn Kemp (in his pre child-bearing years) could dunk like his children depended on it but most of them came from transition and setups from GP. He wasn't particularly good at attacking the rim though.
KJ on the other hand could attack the rim very well to draw fouls and such and even though he did have one of the most memorable dunks of all time, he wasn't a great dunker.
So to say that dunking == taking it strong to the rim isn't completely true.
coloradosun said:I could make this JJ thread into a Q thread.
But I won't.
yotes1921 said:the fact that after three years of watching him you can still say "wow, i didn't know he could that" proves that he can't do it consistently
Not true, it proves that he doesn't not that he can't
Ouchie-Z-Clown said:oooh, i wouldn't say that kj wasn't a great dunker, au contraire, he was extraordinary for his size. he dunked on big men. numerous big men. he dunked on ewing, hot rod (saddled him like a nag), and hakeem.
cheesebeef said:the guy dunked on Mark Eaton for Pete's Sake. KJ WAS a great dunker before his hammy's started giving him problems - he still had that first step after that, but that that explosive ability to jam on people's head was curtailed after his first couples years.
elindholm said:I mean if you COULD get all the way to the rim and get either a layup, dunk or a FT, why wouldn't you when they are higher percentage shots?
Maybe because it's not always the best option. What happens when Stoudemire tries to dunk every time? The defense adjusts and he starts forcing bad shots. If Stoudemire's 15-foot jumper were more reliable, don't you think he'd be using it a lot more?
Suns_fan69 said:Ok, maybe KJ was a bad example... how about Isiah Thomas?
elindholm said:Considering how far he's come in the last year and a half or so, I think it's far too early to start setting limits on what kind of player he can become.
playstation said:JJ's 1.19 points per shot (# 25 shooting guard in league, #77 overall).
Chaplin said:Another question is how do we know JJ couldn't be an attack-the-rim kind of guy? He isn't now, but not because he can't--he doesn't because he doesn't need to.