I'm a bit surprised this at myself but the numbers I just looked at in the link I published above, say Bradley is possibly the WORST choice on this team to fill in at PG.
There a few caveats because of Bradley's injury, inexperience etc, but his performance has been his performance and his game (statistically) just doesn't lend to him playing the position.
His assists/TO % are abysmal, he can't hasn't shown an ability to create shots for himself or others.
Don't get me wrong, I like they guy, but not as a PG from what I'm seeing.
LOL - here I am - a tried and convicted, 'stats guy' - to say: "Stats don't mean xxxxx!" and "Try watching the games with your eyes!!!"
More specifically, that article is, imho, once again simply a very poor usage of statistics.
I'm not saying that Bradley might not be 'the worst' choice to fill in at PG. But that analysis in that article is pretty much useless to me if I want to ask that question.
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Hey, I always go with your interpretation when it comes to stats, but regardless of how you feel about his methodology, what statistical info would you trot out that makes Bradley a good, or even acceptable band aid for the PG position vs Crawford or Lee?
I hear what you're saying but do you think his conclusions are wrong or do you just not like how he got to them?
Do you think the 9 games he played in the D-League and how he played in high school are a better barometer of how he'll perform in the NBA than how he's actually performed in 145 games in the NBA and a year of college?
He's just been mis-coached or under utilized and has been just waiting for the right situation to show he's now an adequate PG?
I'm seriously confused, are you just being contrarian (fellow grouchy old man
)
Well, to answer your question, I wouldn't.
The fact is, I don't see any statistical basis for advocating Bradley as the 'band-aid' starting PG over Crawford -- except maybe defense at PG.
My point is, I also don't see any statistical basis for ruling him _out_ as a better choice for this.
In my opinion, there just really isn't enough data on Bradley playing true point on offense in the NBA to say he's good or bad.
At some point, you have rely on scouting and development and what the staff believes is within the potential of a young player. No player coming out of h.s. or college has ever really 'proven' he can do anything in the NBA until he does.
Danny has been scouting Bradley for years and he and his staff know more about all their players than we do. This is not just an appeal to authority, but rather a simple fact that fans have to accept. That doesn't mean that the staff won't be wrong at times.
There is a trend that is being used by a couple of executives - most notably whatsisname at Orlando who used to be with OKC. The idea is that if you have an SG with the right physical attributes - quickness, among other things - you try him out at PG and force-feed him into becoming competent at it. This was done with Westbrook and is going to happen with Oladipo. There will be growing pains, but if he makes the transition, you end up with a bigger PG who can shoot. If he doesn't you slide them back to SG.
I don't think the Celtic's intend long term to turn Bradley into a starting PG in the same way - because they apparently want Rondo for the long term in that role - but they may feel based on his attributes (beyond what he's displayed in his limited NBA time) that it is possible for Bradley to do the job, with some decent training. And that it won't hurt his development at SG to try this out.