I guess the concern is that for the majority of his career, Green has been a pretty mediocre player statistically, both overall and per-minute. He hasn't shown a lot of improvement until the latter half of last season. Those statistics coincide with observational passivity.
In March and April, Green was outstanding. Is he going to build off of that, or will he regress to the player he's been for his career up to this point?
As usual, Roy nails it. And, as others have said, if Jeff Green is going to be this team's go to guy, then 25-30 wins is probably right.
If Green can build off from the 2nd half of the season, I can definitely see him averaging 25/7/5 next year...
I think the whole Green has been a mediocre player throughout his career is blown out of proportions. He was the third option behind Durant and Westbrook in OKC, and he still averaged around 14 ppg. In Boston, he was behind Pierce/Allen/KG/Rondo...
Last year during the second half of the season, we saw a more aggressive Green and a more confidence Green...
If he can build off that, then I agree with KG...he can and potentially can be a top 5 SF, and with Rondo, that is something to be proud of going forward.
well, i suppose stranger things have happened in life.
however, some more context on what we might be able to expect from green might be helpful. no one in the league averaged 25/10 last year. NO ONE. how close to those numbers are people expecting from green?
as context, five guys averaged over 25/game and eight guys were over 10 rebounds a game last season:
- lebron averaged 26.8 pts and 8 rebounds
- melo 28.7 and 6.9
- durant 28.1 and 7.9, and,
- aldridge 21.1 and 9.1
aldridge is not a sf, but it shows what sort of rarified air we are talking about when we say 20+ points and lots of rebounds a night for green.
david lee was the only guy who averaged more than 18 points and 10 rebounds, by the way.
green will probably be the leading scorer for the celtics. but he wont rebound remotely like a top sf in the nba.
Did someone here actually predict 25 &
10 ?
If so, missed that.
The guy you are responding to predicted 25 & 7 -- which is also a wee bit crazy optimistic. Just not quite as crazy as what you are arguing against.
Not sure why folks are all so bent over it though.
Whatever the numbers, folks are just optimistic that Green will continue to play like he did in the second half last year, when he was finally healthy. Is that so unreasonable?
Do we have any actual reason to believe Green will regress to playing similar to how he did in OKC when he was clearly third or 4th option?
Or how he played last Fall when he was just coming back from open heart surgery and missing a whole season?
The question certainly can be asked, "Which Jeff Green will we get?"
I would submit that given the varied contexts he played in were all so different, that it is perfectly reasonable to assume the most recent extended sample is the most relevant.
In other words, it is perfectly reasonable, until we get new data indicating otherwise, to assume the most recent trend will continue.
I'm expecting somewhere around 33 mpg, within a couple points above or below 20 per game, and a small handful of rebounds and a couple of assists to go along with great perimeter defense. I think that's a reasonable expectation until we learn something new and I will be very happy with that level of production.