Comparing stats is missing the point. At the time of the trade, big al was perceived to be a vastly superior prospect than sully today.
Key word here is "prospect."
Big Al was perceived to be, and at the time rightfully so, a potential All-Star PF with unique post-scoring skills for his age. He was the centerpiece to the KG trade and the rest of the pieces were throw-ins.
Sully is not anywhere near that as a prospect. However, he may eventually be equal to Big Al as a finished product. That is good for us. People don't value him highly as a trade piece so our draft picks become more valuable. Fine. Give them 2017 picks. I'll take the 22 year-old on my team that I know is a double-double threat every game and pair him with Rondo and Love (or similar acquisition).
Comparing stats is missing the point. At the time of the trade, big al was perceived to be a vastly superior prospect than sully today.
Key word here is "prospect."
Big Al was perceived to be, and at the time rightfully so, a potential All-Star PF with unique post-scoring skills for his age. He was the centerpiece to the KG trade and the rest of the pieces were throw-ins.
Sully is not anywhere near that as a prospect. However, he may eventually be equal to Big Al as a finished product. That is good for us. People don't value him highly as a trade piece so our draft picks become more valuable. Fine. Give them 2017 picks. I'll take the 22 year-old on my team that I know is a double-double threat every game and pair him with Rondo and Love (or similar acquisition).
Agreed.
To be brutally honest, I don't think anybody (outside of a large amount of Celtics fans) look at Sully as a guy with future All-Star potential. I think most teams would see him as a guy who has the potential to be a really nice starter for many years and a nice contributor on a playoff team...but not the type of talent you would build around. I guess a good comparison would be somebody like Paul Millsap or Andre Miller.
On the other hand, at the time I think people people looked at Jefferson as a guy with with a very unique talent and with future All-Star potential and rightly so - he may not have become a franchise player, but he's been a borderline All-Star most his career. I think people saw him at the time in a similar light to the way they saw Demarcus Cousins a year ago - a highly skilled big man with sky high potential.
Sullinger was encouraged to take 3s by Stevens...
This isn't the case of a player not understanding his limitations, its a front office and coaching staff understanding the objectives of the season and putting an emphasis on player development. They understand Sully's potential as a 3PT shooter and encouraged him to have confidence in and shoot from 3PT range in game situations.
I disagree.
You can say all you want about the team encouraging Sully to shoot three's (as those Sully defenders always do) and that's fine. When Sully is wide open at the three point line and takes the shot, the "Sully was encouraged to take threes" argument justifies that.
But what it doesn't justify is when he's taking bad shots. I'm talking about off-balance fadeaway shots in the post when he has teammates wide open elsewhere on the court. I'm talking chucking up a three with 18 seconds on the shot clock when other players are open with a better shot. I'm talking about chucking up a three when there is a defender right up in his face. Sully took far too many shots of that nature last season, and It frustrated the hell out of me.
I have absolutely no problems with him taking a wide open three, IF that wide open three is the best shot available. Often the threes he took were either:
1) Not wide open
or
2) Not the best shot available
A very good or great three point shooter can get away with taking that type of shot, even if it is certainly not preferred. If Green or Bradley take that shot, I can live with it - they have hit enough big three's that I have some trust in them taking that gamble. Sully hasn't. He should be taking three's by all means, but only if it's the right shot at the time.