Many talk about Tatum as a future perennial all-star / superstar. I don’t necessarily see that, particularly in terms of his passing and defensive instincts. There’s a lot of criticism for Kyrie, but Tatum seems like an extreme example of Kyrie’s bad habits, with less offensive explosiveness.
Does he need to improve that much as a defender or passer in order to be a perennial All-Star?
Seems to me if he played more minutes and had higher usage, he would just need to maintain similar efficiency while getting to the line a bit more and then he'd be pretty close to that level.
Paul George attempted 21 field goals per game this year.
If Tatum attempted 21 field goals per game and his efficiency and 2P/3P/FT ratio remained the same, Tatum would average 25.18 points per game.
Now, I'm not suggesting he would necessarily maintain his full efficiency if he attempted 8 more shots a game. I don't think it's crazy to think he might. But even if he wasn't quite at that level, as long as he was still fairly efficient, 25+ ppg with solid defense, 5-6+ rebounds a game, on a winning team --- that's going to get you an All-Star berth in an ordinary season.
I think Tatum is a long way away from 25+ ppg with solid defense on a winning team. He’s going to have to actually work to improve his game, rather than trying to emulate Kobe.
I'm not sure why you think he's so far off. He was used as a 2nd or 3rd option, if not lower, most of his first two years in the league. I think it's fair to wonder if he would struggle to get good shots if the defense was focusing on him more.
I tend to think that he's already capable of handling a greater load offensively. He already has a pretty good variety of moves, and if he had more touches I think his shot selection would be more varied. Maybe I'm being too optimistic as far as that goes, but I don't think so.
25 PPG is a lot. That's a huge jump, even if New Orleans turned him into their very clear #1 option, which they probably won't if Holiday and Zion are still there.
Kyrie was Boston's clear #1 option this year. He took 18.5 shots a game with shooting splits of 49/40/87 and he couldn't even average 24 PPG.
I think expecting Tatum to quickly jump to 25 PPG is expecting way too much and will lead to disappointment. Tatum would really need to develop his game to get it to the point of warranting giving him 20 shots a game.
Don't get me wrong. I think if he reaches his ceiling of development that it is possible. But that is years away and will require him to work on his game and develop it a lot more than it developed between his first two years. He has to put in the work.
The thing is, it sounds like a big jump.
And in some ways, it would be.
At the same time, per 36 Jayson was already taking about 15 shots a game this season.
If he played closer to 36 minutes a game, he'd just have to take about one extra shot per quarter, give or take, to get to 20-21 attempts. He was already playing about 31 minutes a game, so that's not a huge leap.
I know it's not really that simple. But it's not such a drastic change that it's outside the realm of what's conceivable if the team moves forward without Kyrie or any other lead star next season and Jayson is elevated to the lead scoring role. As I said in my previous post, he would not need to change his current three point attempt rate or his free throw rate. He wouldn't need to become more efficient than he has been. He would just need to take an extra shot or two in each quarter while playing more minutes.
Perhaps he would not have the strength or stamina to hold up over a full season playing 34-36 minutes per game and also carrying that increased offensive load. I'm not sure I believe that though. He doesn't strike me as a guy whose conditioning is an issue, and his offensive game doesn't really rely on bullying other players or taking a lot of contact.
Anyway, I'm not trying to make this into an argument about whether Tatum is going to average 25 points per game. The point is rather that Tatum's game wouldn't even need to radically change in order for his point per game numbers to go up a lot. We're not even discussing right now whether it's possible he might add some things to other parts of his game, e.g. bulking up and grabbing some more boards, increasing his playmaking a bit, getting a bit more active in passing lanes, etc.
In light of the fact that he's only 21, I think it would be sort of weird to assume he's a finished product and that he won't add to the other parts of his game. And given that he's been a secondary or tertiary option for his first two seasons in the league and he's been super efficient and rarely had to force the issue with that volume, it's not unreasonable to think he could make a jump in terms of scoring.
By the way, as a reference point -- somebody mentioned Danny Granger.
He went from attempting 10.6 shots per game in his second season (age 23), to 15.1 shots the following season (age 24), and then 19.1 field goal attempts in his fourth season (age 25). That was the season he made the All-Star team averaging 25.8 points per game.