Luke Kornet looks more like a solid pickup than Mo Wagner
definitely .... his 3 pt shooting has come down to earth a bit. But any open 3 shot opportunity, feels like it will go in
The way he challenges shots at the rim, is reassuring
He looks like he knows what his role is. Wagner has no idea what he's supposed to be doing on the court.
I get that Kornet 'knows his role', but Wagner is so much more fluid both offensively and defensively. Not great that he was part of the grouping that totally blew the lead last night, but I would much rather move forward with Wagner. It is painful to me watching Kornet play basketball. I guess he's tall, though.
What is it that you’ve seen from Wagner that you’ve liked?
In his time in Boston, I think he has generally looked terrible. The coaching staff is certainly treating him like an end of bencher, and his prior teams have given up on him as well.
I liked him in college, and I was interested to see what he could bring here, but has he shown himself to be anything more than a vet minimum guy?
Kornet produces like a third-string center should. If I had to keep just one, it would definitely be him. He seems capable of both defending the rim and being a good pick and roll defender.
Wagner has been incredibly disappointing in Boston, but he was in the rotation in Washington (15 mins a game over 25 games), led his team in Net rating, and was one of only three players to have a positive net rating. He started 13 games for them, and Washington was 8-5 in those games compared to 6-20 in the rest of their games before he was traded. It hasn’t worked at all here, and I don’t know why, but there was evidence that a guy in his third year had begun to figure out the NBA and could be a positive contributor off the bench.
I get it. Presumably, Danny saw some of the same things. But, Washington also declined his qualifying offer. It could be its an indictment of things like Net Rating, which are really flawed estimates to begin with.
They declined his 4th year player option, not his QO, to clarify. It wouldn't be the first time a team has declined a rookie-scale player option only to see a guy show up a bit more in year 3. Also, it's not like the Wizards are the shrewdest front office in the land, as they seemingly can't pick a direction to go in. At the time they declined the option, the Wizards were about $15 million below next year's tax line with only 7 other players having guaranteed salaries, so $3.8 million might have been above their price range for a guy who at the time was a third-stringer before Thomas Bryant got hurt.
I still believe in Mo as a viable NBA reserve, but I no longer believe in Mo as a viable reserve in Boston this season, and I don't think it's been helpful to him that his limited non-garbage time minutes with the C's have been primarily played at the 4, which is not his best position. At the time of the deal, some were worried that Mo would play himself out of the $3.8 million the C's could offer him next season -- if nothing else, that concern has been ameliorated.
All really good stuff C21. Thank you for explaining everything so I don’t have to.
Of course I am still salty that we traded Theis for two 3rd string centers, when we just didn’t need to in order to stay below the tax; but that’s my own personal issue.
I just think Mo has a lot more potential to contribute in a versatile role, both offensively and defensively. He is switchable on defense, can hit the 3 on offense, and even has some moves (the play he got called for the hook was well beyond anything Kornet can do).
I also just hate big stiffs, especially when they aren’t particularly strong. Kornet always just seems to be clumsily dancing around on Defense and then happens to be tall enough to block a shot here and there because offensive players don’t respect him. Really hoping we move on from him. But, honestly, I don’t really care if we move on from Mo, too. Just a dumb trade imo.