ugghh....
so greg Monroe is so great and going to bring us to the promised land. how come he couldn't do that in Detroit?
this is aiming low at it's best imo.
The reason for this is because Detroit never used Monroe the right way.
Many people don't realise this, but Monroe is a natural Center - he's not a Power Forward. There are many reasons why this is true:
1) He lacks the mobility to be an effective defender at the PF spot
2) He doesn't stretch the floor (92% of his offense came from within 10 feet this season)
If you look at Monroe's advanced stats (PER vs opponent PER) you'll see that Monroe consistently dominated his opponents when he was playing at the Center spot. However when he was playing at the Power Forward spot, he PER and his opponents PER were essentially equal.
Detroit has played Monroe at PF ever since Drummond has been there, yet almost every statistic you look at will tell you that Monroe MUST be a center if you want to make the most of his talents. He can still play some PF and can hold his own there, but if you're playing him at the PF spot as his primary position, you're wasting his talent.
Detroit's roster has been an absolute mess the last few seasons. Not only have they played Monroe at PF, but they also had Josh Smith at SF - an equally poor rotation decision. Smith is not a great outside shooter, but is a pretty good rebounder, a good shot-blocker, and a VERY efficient scorer around the basket. There is absolutely no reason to play Smith at PF except that he's a high profile player, he was on a big contract, and the PF / C spots were already filled.
So Detroit had Drummond at Center, Monroe at PF and Josh Smith at SF. That's three guys who don't spare the floor, all on the court at the same time. Terrible.
Then you add Brandon Jennings (possibly THE most inefficient scorer among all starting point guards) as your starter at the PG spot.
Put that all together, thrown in poor coaching and horrible management, and you have a situation that could never possibly have a hope of achieving any success at all.
Right now, Monroe is:
* A skilled inside scorer
* An excellent offensive and defensive rebounder
* Very good at drawing fouls, and a good free throw shooter
* An excellent passer for a big man
Another nice thing about Monroe is that he doesn't need to be the center of attention in order to be effective/productive. He averaged 18 points per 36 minutes this season despite a pretty modest usage rate, and even came off the bench for a good portion of the season (because the Drummond/Monroe/Smith trio fit so poorly together).
The biggest thing holding Monroe back right now is his lack of offense outside 10 feet - he took only 8% of his shots from out there. But his career stats indicate that he by no means incapable of making those shots. He's shown he can hit the midrange jumper (43% from 16 - 3PT in 2011/12, 41% from 10 - 16 feet in 2013/14) but he just hasn't done it with any consistency. Not surprising given that only 13% of his shots have come from midrange over his career. It's hard to shoot consistently if you're taking the shot so infrequently.
This is why I feel Boston could really be a good fit for Monroe. Brad Stevens has been pushing every player who's come here to take more outside shots and to develop their jump shots from distance. I have no doubt he'd encourage Monroe to take more midrange jumpers if he came here, and if there's anybody in the league to could develop Monroe into a consistent midrange shooter, I think Stevens is the guy.
Monroe with a jumper would be a very tough cover offensively. I mean he's ALREADY a tough cover, but add a jump shot to his game and I think he'd be a legit 20/10 guy.
In a nutshell Greg Monroe's upside offensively is Al Jefferson, although Monroe is a more efficient scorer (due to his ability to get to the line at a high rate - which Jefferson does not).
The big difference is that statistically, Monroe is actually a plus defender at the center spot (he has a positive Defensive RPM) whereas Jefferson is statistically one of the worst defenders in the NBA.
So If you imagine an Al Jefferson clone who can hold his own on defense and who gets to the line more, then that's Monroe's upside in a nutshell.