they are both pretty severely washed up. LIke putting Toronto Hakeem with Sonics Ewing.
We shall see. I'd liken Shaq more to David Robinson of 2002 or 2003, and I just think your flat way off the mark on KG. Bug again, we'll see.
Come on... KG's 14 and 7 was about equal to Jermaine O'Neal last year (another washed up big man). Those numbers are just going to dive more this year. KG is old.
Shaq averaged 12 and 6 as a starter... getting bench minutes means he'll probably average 6 and 3 on this team.
I imagine KG will put up numbers equal to Ewing on the SOnics... while Shaq might put up Raptors Hakeem numbers.
:Shrugs: I don't think their impacts are measured only in points and rebounds. For example, in last year's playoffs:
KG scored 16.2 points on 49.5% FG with 1.5 TOs per 36 minutes. Meanwhile,
his primary defensive assignments (Beasley, Jamison, Lewis, and Gasol) averaged 9 points on 36% FG with 2.3 TOs per 36 minutes when he was guarding them (523 total minutes).
Those same 4 guys averaged
20.6 points on 53.4% FG with 1.5 TOs per 36 minutes against Boston when KG wasn't on them (234 minutes). And they averaged 18.2 points on 53.7% FG and 1.8 TOs per 36 minutes in the 2010 postseason when they weren't playing Boston.
In other words, KG took 4 guys that scored a lot on great percentages against other teams (and even against the Celtics when he was on the bench) and shut them out of the scoreboards.
And that's not even mentioning KG's team defensive impact, where the 2010 Celtics postseason defense with KG suddenly looked eerily similar to the 2008 Celtics postseason defense and absolutely nothing like 2009 Celtics defense without him.
Similarly, I don't expect Shaq to suddenly come in here and average 20 and 10 again. But if he starts, I expect that the team offense will suddenly start working better. Efficiency will be up, scoring will be up, and scoring droughts on the first unit will decrease. Now it may be Rondo or Pierce that gets the credit for this because they likely will lead the team in scoring and assists again. But the underlying difference from years past will be the threat of 2 bigs as skilled and still difficult to defend as KG and Shaq on one frontline.
I could care less what their averages are, and I haven't even spent much ink on Jermaine who I was also pretty excited about before Shaq signed. But I think the 2010-11 Celtics are going to surprise a lot of people this year, and I'm counting down the days until the season starts and I can watch it pan out.