I stopped reading your post about here. Bass shed that nickname last season and if anything would pass the ball too often when he had a decent look. He is a knock down mid range shooter with the ability to get to the rim and did so many times in iso situations during the playoffs and in the post. He also passed it way too often and Rondo would be forced to throw it up when Bass had a decent shot with the shot clock almost gone.
Please watch a few games before you crap on a guy you obviously haven't watched.
I subscribed to NBA TV and watched every single Celtics game of both the regular season and the playoffs. Obviously it's
you who didn't watch any games.
Throughout the season I constantly heard commentators say sneaky things about Bass like "well, they didn't sign him to pass the ball!".
Bass DOES NOT PASS.
Sure he'll pass the ball during general ball rotation, but if he catches the ball in his 'spot' or midway throught he shot clock he will try to chuck up a shot absolutely regardless of who or how many people are on him.
To Bass' credit he averaged very few turnovers and was among league leaders in that area, but Green is also a very low turnover guy.
Also I'm not 'crapping' on Bass, I'm simply acknowledging the limitations of his game.
Bass is one of the greatest midrange jump shooters from 10-15 feet in the NBA today. Leave him open from that range and he will hit the shot almost every time. No one here or anywhere has denied this.
As I said in my previous post, he also gets the occasional offensive rebound and putback - it's not often, but I liked the fact that he was about the only Celtics big who even
tried to go after offensive rebounds.
That said Bass did not get moved into the starting lineup until both Jermaine Oneal AND Chris Wilcox were declared out for the season. When JO went down they were starting Garnett (PF) and Wilcox (C) much of the time. Then when Wilcox went down they moved Bass into the starting lineup and shifted KG over to center.
Wilcox is a superior player at the PF position to Bass in almost every way. He's at least as good a defender, he's a better rebounder, he's a better inside scorer, he's more athletic, he's bigger. The only thing Bass does better then Wilcox is he hits more midrange jumpers and he turns the ball over less.
Everyone is judging Green's performance at the PF position based on numbers he produced in OKC. Here he:
1. Never had a coach like Doc to guide him
2. Never had veterans like KG and Pierce to learn from
3. Never had an all-star big like KG) to take pressure off him
4. Never had a elite pass-first PG like Rondo to deliver him the ball
Serge Ibaka was a non factor and Perkins hadn't arrived yet. Jeff Green was essentially the primary 'big man' in OKC and would have been defensive focus of opposing teams top teir bids.
In Boston the primary big man is always going to be KG - Green wouldn't attract the defensive attention he received in OKC, beause he'd be a secondary option at PF just like Bass was for Boston last season. The reason Bass was so effective is because the defense flocked to Allen, Pierce and (more importantly) KG which often left Bass open, at which point the best playmaker in the league was there to deliver him the ball.
Green has never had that benefit. During Green's short stint in Boston Big Baby was always the primary backup at the PF position, leaving Green mostly backing up Pierce at SF position.
In fact, in 28 games as a Celtic Jeff Green averaged 9.8 points and 3.3 rebounds in 23.5 minutes.
That converts to 13.2 points and 4.5 rebounds per 31.7 minutes adjusted for a guy who had just been thrown into a team midseason and forced to adjust to a bench role for he first time in his career.
Bass averaged 12.5 points and 6.2 rebounds in 31.7 minutes per game last season (he averaged only 11.1 and 5.3 in the playoffs) for a team he was with the entire season.
You say not to crap on a guy you claim I haven't watched (when I've probably watched him more then you) while you are crapping on a guy you truly
haven't watched, because nobody really knows what Green could be capapble of when put into the same position Bass was in last year - where most defenses ignored him, everything was handed to him on a silver platter and all he had to do was pretty much catch and shoot.
How do you think Bass would have fared if you started him on the 2010-2011 Thunder and asked him to be their primary inside scorer? You think he would have seriously fared any better than Green? All the footage I've seen (where Bass has been forced to be the #1 offensive target) in Boston suggests otherwise.
If you truly had watched Boston's games (as you suggest you have) you would have seen all the times where the other starters were resting, and Bass was on the court along with 4 of Boston's offensively incapable bench. In these scenarios Bass was Boston's number one option on offense, and he struggled immensely - often forcing bad, highly contested shots or running into defenders under the basket and losing the ball.
Bass is a role player, and a VERY good one at that. You can throw him into any game and he will work his butt off, he'll hustle for loose balls, and he'll knock down 15 foot jumpers like they're going out of fashion...but ask him to do any more then that and he gets uncomfortable and starts making mistakes.
For Bass to become a legitimate starting calibre player he needs to develop his game beyond that jump shot. On VERY rare occasions in Boston he put the ball on the floor and took it hard to the rim, and when he did that he was usually very successful - either scoring or getting to the line. He's surprisingly athletic for a man with his strength, and no he takes it hard to the hole no one wants to get in his way. Problem is he never does it. If you're lucky he may drive it one time in ever 5 games, otherwise he just settles for jump shots.
Jeff Green is
infinately more talented then Bass and has far more well rounded game. People say he's never shown it, but in Boston he's yet to have a chance.
Kevin Garnett to this day is still one of the best defensive big men in the league, he's still an elite rebounder and he's still an excellent scorer. He takes a LOT of pressure off whoever is playing alongside him at PF, and putting Jeff Green in that role could well see his numbers increase dramatically once he becomes familiar with the system and starts seeing some of those open looks Bass frequently received.
Also Green was never comfortable in his first season in Boston because Big Baby was always the first man off the bench, and having two frontcourt guys battling for 'first off the bench' left neither of them looking comfortable.
Green was clearly more comforable as a starter then he was as a second reserve in Boston, while Bass' numbers really didn't change when he was moved from the bench to the starting lineup in Boston. I just think the Bass is more valiable as a super-consistent bench player then he is as a starter.