25 plus points is wildly optimistic and even 22 points is too. For him to get to those marks without taking 18-20 shots a game, he has to be able to get to the free throw line 8 plus times a game or shoot 40 percent from three on a bunch of attempts per game. He has never been able to do that. For his skill set and efficiency level, I'd expect maybe 17-18 points on 14-15 shots/game.
One unknown is how he's going to handle being guarded by small forwards most of the time. He hasn't faced that kind of defensive coverage since his rookie year when he played small forward and Durant played guard. He was most successful last season when he was the small ball power forward taking slower bigs off the dribble almost exclusively to his right. Small forwards are drastically different defensive beasts.
I don't see why.
Everybody judged Jeff Green's ability based on:
1. What he averaged in OKC (still developing, and a third scoring option)
2. What he averaged as bench player (and a third scoring option) for the Celtics
Neither of these options here is representative of the situation Jeff will be in next year.
Just to put things into perspective, in his first three years with OKC James Harden averaged (per 36 minutes):
09-10
- 15.5 points
- 40% FG
- 38% 3PT
- 81% FT
10-11
- 16.4 points
- 43.6% FG
- 35% 3PT
- 84% FT
11-12
- 19.2 points
- 49% FG
- 39% 3PT
- 85% FT
With the exception of 11-12 those numbers are not far off what Green was averaging with OKC as a third option in his first several years, and even in 11-12 (Harden's best season in OKC) he still only averaged around 2 or 3 PP36 more than what Green has all that time.
As soon as Harden went to the Rockets what happened to his scoring numbers per 36?
- 24.3 Points
- 44% FG
- 37% 3PT
- 85% FT
Once he moved from a third scoring option to a first scoring option his scoring numbers increase significantly (more touches) while his FG% reduced significantly (as he go more attention from defense).
Now Jeff never averaged 19 PP36 as a third option so again I don't necessarilly expect his scoring numbers would jump quite to the same level as Harden's did, but within 2-3 points of Harden's average is really not out of the realm of possibility.
That would put Green at around 23 PPG with I think is very possible.
To me there are two key factors to consider.
1. Starter vs Reserve role
Jeff's numbers as a starter vs a reserve varied quite dramatically. I don't believe this is a fluke, I think it has a lot to do with his style of play in that he prefers to let the game come to him rather than just force everything. I think this type of 'patient' offense means he really needs the big starters minutes to put up big numbers. He clearly played at a different level as a starter vs a reserve, so judging his production based on his reserve play isn't really realistic.
2. Playing behind other guys
To this day Jeff still has never been the #1 scoring option on a team. He's always played behind either Durant and Westbrook, or Pierce and KG. His numbers in OKC and his numbers as a reserve in Boston are all based on him being in #3 option. Only once KG got hurt did Jeff start in his place and get upgraded to a #2 scoring option after Pierce, and the instant that happened he immediately showcased his ability to dominate the game offensively. Even after KG returned Green remained more or less a #2 option from that point on, and throughout that stretch he averaged 20 PPG the entire way.
Next year who could possibly be a top scoring option ahead of Green? Rondo? Sully? Bass? Lee? No chance. Green as a scorer is leagues ahead of anybody else on the roster right now, so he will be forced into a "#1 scorer" role from day one. For him to average 24 PPG all he needs to do is take
five more shot attempts than he did as a starter last year and make
two of them.
I find it very hard to believe that he's not capable of that given how far he is above everybody else on the roster as a scorer.
IMHO after he began playing starters minutes Jeff Green was our best scorer, clearly more dominant than Pierce offensively over that stretch. Pierce even during big games looked like he was struggling and forcing a lot of those shots, wheras Green always looked like when he DID score it was absoutely effortless. He often went to the exact same move over and over, yet still teams could do nothing to stop it. I think it's all but certain he will improve further during the off season and come back better again.
I think the 19 PPG some people are mentioning is the
absolute minimum we will see Green average this season. If his average falls significantly below that I will be very, very surprised.