You’re way too high on Stevens relative to Hauser. Hauser is absolutely above Stevens in the rotation. It’s not even a given Stevens makes the team. Hauser will be in the opening night rotation, that’s already been decided by the team based on his body of work last year. They aren’t going to yank him out based on 3-4 preseason games. Brissett probably will be in the rotation too — the rest of the guys will have to earn their time as the season goes along, assuming they make it to opening day.
I'd be surprised if Stevens didn't make the team, but otherwise I agree. I don't quite understand why so many folks see Hauser as a question mark for the rotation. He's an elite shooter who plays passable-to-solid defense.
I too would be surprised if Stevens didn’t make the team, but he’s only on a training camp contract so his spot certainly isn’t a given. If the right player shakes loose from another team, I think Stevens would be out (but I don’t think such a player will become available).
I guess that I do see that the shine has worn off some from Hauser. He was great at times last season but towards the end and then now this preseason, to me, he has regressed, possibly regressing to the mean. Stevens just looks like more of a NBA athlete to me. Yes, Hauser shoots better when he shoots better, Stevens does everything else better. I am not entirely sold on either so wouldn't be all that surprised in any case but at this point, I see Stevens having an edge on getting rotation minutes once the season starts but in my view, neither is a lock.
So just as I say this, Hauser goes out and has a good game. I only saw the first half and didn't see Stevens play at all but based on the box score, he didn't appear to have done much. I base a lot of my player evaluation on what I see on the court. I consider stats too, especially if I haven't seen a player all that much.
Hauser can shoot, no doubt about that, but it is hard to parse out his shooting in garbage time from his shooting in more critical game moments. To me, he is on the fringe of a core rotation NBA player. It is different for him from what I see when he is out there with the "big boys" vs. other less critical times. Stevens may be on that same fringe but I just see a lot more athleticism and physicality with him. Like Brissett, he is not a 3-point shooter though and these days, that is important.
I guess we will see how it all works out. I am not saying there is a big separation between any of Brissett, Stevens, and Hauser. Mykhailkiuk is now in that same mix also. But right now, I would rank them as follows in terms of potential value to the team:
Brissett
Stevens
Hauser
Mykhailiuk
I don't think we need all 4 of them. Even if we start the season with all 4, that may change along the way. Stevens and Mykhailiuk are both "waiveable", Brissett and Hauser have guaranteed contracts, so that is a factor also. And Mykhailiuk has looked really good, he is trending up.
I'm assuming you're replying to me, but you didn't quote my post with Hauser's stats.
I guess we can all play the "I judge by my eye" game, but when you say his stats might be improved by garbage time minutes you'd have to go judge what "garbage" really is, see if the other guys on the floor are playing actual defense, and determine if Hauser was just more confident in his stroke then because there was no victory/loss hanging in the balance.
All I know is, you can look at the April 25th 119-117 loss to the Hawks in the playoffs (no garbage time there) and see that Hauser went 3-5 (2-4 from three) with two rebounds, two assists, one block, and no turnovers in 14 minutes.
I'm just not seeing how his play dropped off late in the season, or that just his shooting stayed good because he played in garbage time.
There's a recency effect going on with fans who just see that he barely played against the Sixers and Heat in the last two series of the playoffs. Again, that's not Sam's fault that his minutes were cut drastically.