A lot of people won't get this comparison but I'd put Olynyk as a taller Detlef Schrempf with maybe some better post skills.
Detlef was always call the poor man's Bird but he actually had more of a straight jumper and more athletic skill set where Bird was more of a scorer than just a shooter.
You don't mention the things the Schrempf was better at. Are you saying KO is better?
I'd say they might be equivalent players. Obviously prime years Schrempf is better than rookie KO. I really haven't seen enough of KO to say for sure his ball handling will be as good or his 3pt shot but they definitely can be. I wouldn't be surprised at all if their career stats are very similar.
"they definitely can be"? Based on what? The idea that anything is possible?
Maybe Bass one day will shoot 3's like Schrempf. It is possible.
I have a few pet peeves on player comparisons. One is saying "a poor man's". That is saying nothing. It is saying essentially "I think these guys have similar styles, but I am unwilling to make any statement about whether one of them will have any success". When asking about how good someone will be, style tells us little. How successful will they be at that style?
What is particularly silly about "a poor man's" is that it doesn't tell us if the player is 90% of the comparison player or 10%. Even worse, the comparisons tend to be based more on a single skill and on appearance (esp race) instead of based on all-around game. How many unathletic white shooters who can't pass, are defensive liabilities, and don't have much of a post game get called at one point a "poor man's Bird" just because of the smooth jumper, lack of hops, position, and skin color. Are you overweight? Poor man's Barkley. Even though you can't leave the lane while Barkley could do everything on the court.
Another pet peeve of mine is comparing a rookie who hasn't proven that he can do anything effectively in the NBA to an all-star caliber player 'but with a better X'. Uh, what about all the stuff that the all-star caliber player is better at? Nevermind that the rookie hasn't shown any reason for us to expect that they will ever be great at even that one skill in the NBA, but why compare to other players if you can't evaluate more than one skill of that other player.
I think Avery Bradley is a poor man's Michael Jordan, but with better ball pressure skills.
