Author Topic: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time  (Read 57185 times)

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Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #285 on: August 18, 2016, 05:04:33 PM »

Offline jpotter33

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I see all this talk about Noel being a defensive powerhouse etc

If you see his numbers per 36 mins they are very close to those of Amir (with the diff that Amir has a much better FG%)

First remark, how is Noel supposed to fill a hole in our roster when we already have a player who does most of what Noel does in the defensive end.

Second remark, No, this is not worth a #3 pick.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=1&p1=johnsam01&p2=noelne01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=#per_minute::none
Noel will get better Amir is who he is. Plus CBS is a great coach. Brown TBD.

Unless you have foreknowledge of the future, the most you can say is that there is reason to hope Noel will get better because he is still 22yo. His game is based on athleticism rather than skill anyway, so the margin for improvement is not as big as many think.

But this is hardly relevant since Noel's contract expires in one year - so who cares even if Noel is an All Star 3-4 years from now?
As it is, we will be trading for a one year rental of a more athletic Amir who can't score. Doesn't move the needle much.

As for giving up Brown for Noel, I hope you are kidding. Sure, Brown's value is to be determined. But he is under contract until 2020. This means that if Brown turns out as good as Ainge hoped when he drafted him at #3, he still doesn't get to pay him any more than the 5 mill already agreed.  Our room for trades/signing FAs is already getting limited and it will be even more so as our rookies become RFAs. Ppl have to get used to the idea that we do not have infinite money to spend as we did the last three seasons, esp. on long term projects. What this team needs to get to the next level is one or two more players in or near the top-20, like Horford.

Come on. That is ridiculously reaching. Noel put up historical numbers as a rookie on the defensive end, and he's been hampered by a historically bad 76ers team his whole career. There's a reason one was drafted sixth (even with a torn ACL) and the other was drafted 56th out of high school. Noel's ceiling is much higher than Amir's ever was, and the fact that his statistical output in two years is already better than most of Amir's career is evidence of this.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=1&p1=noelne01&p2=johnsam01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=

Even Amir's best year is worse than Nerlens' past year, so this entire line of arguments seems totally off-base.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=0&y1=2013&p1=johnsam01&y2=2016&p2=noelne01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=

First of all, just to be clear: what I am saying is that it is unlikely that next season's Noel will be significantly better than Amir. I only care about what Noel will give in the one year that remains in his contract - ceiling is irrelevant.

Second, have you even gone through the link you sent me allegedly comparing their two best seasons?

Amir PER: 17.3
Noel PER: 16.2

Amir WS: 7.3
Noel WS: 3.0

Amir FG%: .554
Noel FG%: .521

Amir VORP: 3.2
Noel VORP: 1.3

Amir BPM: 3.5
Noel BPM: 0.7

Noel has a few more pts, rebs and ca. 1 steal (and turnover) more per game. In what world did Noel had the better year?

Also, FYI the numbers Noel put as a rookie are pretty standard for a good rookie center that gets playing time.  If you want 'historical' look up Timmy's or KAT's numbers.

Noel averaged over 2 steals and 2 blocks per 36, which are historically good defensive numbers for a rookie center that Towns didn't even come close to. That's what I was talking about, and it's certainly true. Further, sure, if you don't want to take into context the teams that each were playing on, you can make an argument with certain advanced stats that Amir's *best* year was about equal to Noel's rookie year, even though Noel was better pretty much across the board than Amir in traditional stars. It's clear that Noel is a much better defender overall than Amir ever was, which is why they're both professionals, not due to their offense.

And this whole narrative of only considering next year is hogwash, too. First, he'd undoubtedly be better than Amir next year, because he's only getting better with more reps, especially on a much better team, while Amir is on the decline.  Second, he's a *restricted* free agent next year, so acting like we could just pick him up the next summer with no problem is naive and not true. If Embiid turns out to be a bust or gets injured again, which are decent chances, then Philly will lock Noel up long-term, and there's literally nothing we could do about it. Third, trading for him and getting his rights means that we could pay him more for longer, so it's absolutely not *just* about next year with acquiring Noel. Acquiring him through a trade might legitimately be the only way we can get him.

Look, we're not going to trade someone like Brown or Smart for Noel. It just doesn't make sense value-wise and with the context of everything considered. But something like Rozier, Young, and the Memphis pick is about right value for him, and it'd be absolutely worth it for us to do so. He'd give us the opportunity to be a historically good defensive team, and we'd have a shot at dethroning Cleveland with our superior perimeter and interior defense.
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Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #286 on: August 18, 2016, 05:11:02 PM »

Offline LarBrd33

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BTW.  I thought most people understood this, but it suddenly dawned on me that people here are likely ignorant to an important fact regarding Noel's contract situation.

So many people saying "Why don't we just sign him in free agency if we want him?"

Two key reasons why that doesn't make sense.

#1 - Philly can match any offer.  You're assuming that sNoel's value is going to rise so high over the next year that someone will offer him a max contract, but Philly will not want to retain him as an asset.  That makes no logical sense.

#2 - More importantly in regards to Boston's roster construction, that idea operates under the assumption that we'd free up cap space to use on Nerlens Noel.   WHy would we do that?  If Boston actually wants Noel, they could just trade for him now and then next Summer his cap hold would only be about 5.8 mil.   They would then still be able to free up enough cap space to go after someone like Blake Griffin or (more likely) Gordan Hayward.  They then could extend Noel to a contract of their choosing (or match any offer he gets from other teams).   If Ainge truly wants Noel and sees him as a key part of this team's future, grabbing him before the trade deadline makes the most sense.  They would be able to quickly come to terms with another impact player (like Hayward) and retain Noel since he'd have a relatively small cap hold at the start of free agency.  That's not to say we'll give up a the entire team to get him.  It just means that folks who keep perpetuating the "if we want him, we can just sign him" predictably don't know what they are talking about. 


Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #287 on: August 18, 2016, 05:13:32 PM »

Offline tankcity!

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I don't know where the idea of trading Brown for Noel came from. That is very dumb since you can offer a max to Noel next year....It's pretty simple actually. Just wait Philly out until their price drops, if it doesn't, offer Noel the max and either way your benefiting. Really simple stuff here guys. I don't know how this thread go to be this long, nor the petty arguments. The situation is pretty clear and there are some bias posters who just like to stir things up. Don't let it get to you riled up.
Timeline of events:

-Noel removes the Philly banner from his twitter
-Noel removes the avatar of him wearing a 76ers uniform
-Noel's twitter signature now says "#BostonStrong... Current 76er" emphasis on "Current" which implies it's temporary
-Noel makes his first tweet in over a month, randomly showing how much he loves his city of Boston
-Noel changes his twitter avatar to a black box with a hidden message
-My video goes viral and gets back to Noel
-Noel removes his black box avatar and replaces it with an image of Mitch from "Paid in Full" where the character says, "Real Men Handles their Business". 

Does it seem that farfetched that Noel would hint about being traded for Brown in his avatar?  Is it actually less weird/sketchy for Noel to go out of his way to change his twitter avatar to a random black box?   No... either way, he's trying to make a statement through social media... and judging by the dozens of articles that have been published about Noel's twitter shenanigans, it's pretty clear his plan has been successful.   Like I said before, let’s dispel once and for all with this fiction that Nerlens Noel doesn’t know what he’s doing. He knows exactly what he’s doing.   Frankly, we aren't overreacting enough.   August 26th is a little over a week away.  I'm pretty nervous about it.  On one hand, I want us to keep Brown.  On the other hand, I would love to have Noel on the Celtics.  Hopefully the deal falls apart and we can convince them to take a lesser package.

Nothing you have said points to Brown being traded. It seems like you are talking out of your butt. Can you just please answer me one question? Why would the Celtics give up that much for Noel, when they can offer him max next year. If a trade happens, it will be a deal the Celtics win. I'm sorry if this pains you to hear. Philly has no leverage. If you can prove they do, that would be great. I've read all your points and still can't find one proving the Sixers leverage. If he is such a hot commodity, why hasn't he been traded?

Just a waste of everyone's time.
They could try signing him next Summer, but he's a restricted free agent.  Philly will just match any offer.  I don't know what you mean by giving up "that much".  We don't know what either side is giving up.  We don't even know if a trade will go down.  Despite Noel's twitter antics, I'm still convinced it makes the most sense for Philly to just hang onto their bigs heading into the season.

The "leverage" that Philly has is that they own the players teams like Boston wants.  As long as Boston continues to have interest in guys like Okafor/Noel and they are under contract with the 76ers, the 76ers are the gatekeepers.   No trade has gone down, obviously, because nobody has yet offered them anything worth trading for. 

Some people think Boston and Philly have already agreed to a trade and we're just waiting for it to become official.   I personally have a hard time imagining it would be a straight-up deal.  Other pieces would likely be involved, I'd guess.

LB, give it a rest. Nobody cares about your pathetic Sixers. You're singlehandedly keeping this pointless thread afloat with your regurgitated nonsense.



First, not a shocker you like the show since you're obviously an old dude.

Okay so let Philly pay him the max. I don't understand what the big deal is. You act like the Celtics are desperate when actually they are desperate for a scorer. They can also pay for Okafor, and then Embiid as well. Simmons and Saric as well. Great idea. Use all your resources on bigs. Lol. You can't ignore that one day they will need to trade one of these guys and the longer they wait, the more their development will hurt and so will their trade value. You think their trade value is low now since oh I don't know, nobody is trading for him. Watch what it's like when every big on that team is making the max.

Time to hang it up old man. The game has passed you. I thank god you are not a GM. You would just offer your best assets immediately.

Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #288 on: August 18, 2016, 05:16:05 PM »

Offline tankcity!

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BTW.  I thought most people understood this, but it suddenly dawned on me that people here are likely ignorant to an important fact regarding Noel's contract situation.

So many people saying "Why don't we just sign him in free agency if we want him?"

Two key reasons why that doesn't make sense.

#1 - Philly can match any offer.  You're assuming that sNoel's value is going to rise so high over the next year that someone will offer him a max contract, but Philly will not want to retain him as an asset.  That makes no logical sense.

#2 - More importantly in regards to Boston's roster construction, that idea operates under the assumption that we'd free up cap space to use on Nerlens Noel.   WHy would we do that?  If Boston actually wants Noel, they could just trade for him now and then next Summer his cap hold would only be about 5.8 mil.   They would then still be able to free up enough cap space to go after someone like Blake Griffin or (more likely) Gordan Hayward.  They then could extend Noel to a contract of their choosing (or match any offer he gets from other teams).   If Ainge truly wants Noel and sees him as a key part of this team's future, grabbing him before the trade deadline makes the most sense.  They would be able to quickly come to terms with another impact player (like Hayward) and retain Noel since he'd have a relatively small cap hold at the start of free agency.  That's not to say we'll give up a the entire team to get him.  It just means that folks who keep perpetuating the "if we want him, we can just sign him" predictably don't know what they are talking about.

I just answered this question. Read through page 20 again.

Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #289 on: August 18, 2016, 05:17:37 PM »

Offline tankcity!

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I can go all day with this, haha. I'm too smart for your garbage words that come out to nothing but poo Lbrrd.

Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #290 on: August 18, 2016, 05:24:33 PM »

Offline LarBrd33

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Tank... wut?

I Just explained why "if they want him they can just sign him" doesn't make sense.   Philly will match any offer.  Grabbing him now means we could still have cap space to go after a shooter like Hayward since Noel would only count as a 5.8 mil cap hold at the start of 2017 Free Agency.   If the goal is to grab Noel AND target a shooter like Hayward next Summer, they can't accomplish that without trading for Noel now. 

Also, I'm in no way advocating trading all our assets for Noel.   I wish we could get Noel for what Ainge has been reportedly willing to offer. 


Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #291 on: August 18, 2016, 05:30:40 PM »

Offline greece66

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I see all this talk about Noel being a defensive powerhouse etc

If you see his numbers per 36 mins they are very close to those of Amir (with the diff that Amir has a much better FG%)

First remark, how is Noel supposed to fill a hole in our roster when we already have a player who does most of what Noel does in the defensive end.

Second remark, No, this is not worth a #3 pick.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=1&p1=johnsam01&p2=noelne01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=#per_minute::none
Noel will get better Amir is who he is. Plus CBS is a great coach. Brown TBD.

Unless you have foreknowledge of the future, the most you can say is that there is reason to hope Noel will get better because he is still 22yo. His game is based on athleticism rather than skill anyway, so the margin for improvement is not as big as many think.

But this is hardly relevant since Noel's contract expires in one year - so who cares even if Noel is an All Star 3-4 years from now?
As it is, we will be trading for a one year rental of a more athletic Amir who can't score. Doesn't move the needle much.

As for giving up Brown for Noel, I hope you are kidding. Sure, Brown's value is to be determined. But he is under contract until 2020. This means that if Brown turns out as good as Ainge hoped when he drafted him at #3, he still doesn't get to pay him any more than the 5 mill already agreed.  Our room for trades/signing FAs is already getting limited and it will be even more so as our rookies become RFAs. Ppl have to get used to the idea that we do not have infinite money to spend as we did the last three seasons, esp. on long term projects. What this team needs to get to the next level is one or two more players in or near the top-20, like Horford.

Come on. That is ridiculously reaching. Noel put up historical numbers as a rookie on the defensive end, and he's been hampered by a historically bad 76ers team his whole career. There's a reason one was drafted sixth (even with a torn ACL) and the other was drafted 56th out of high school. Noel's ceiling is much higher than Amir's ever was, and the fact that his statistical output in two years is already better than most of Amir's career is evidence of this.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=1&p1=noelne01&p2=johnsam01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=

Even Amir's best year is worse than Nerlens' past year, so this entire line of arguments seems totally off-base.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=0&y1=2013&p1=johnsam01&y2=2016&p2=noelne01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=

First of all, just to be clear: what I am saying is that it is unlikely that next season's Noel will be significantly better than Amir. I only care about what Noel will give in the one year that remains in his contract - ceiling is irrelevant.

Second, have you even gone through the link you sent me allegedly comparing their two best seasons?

Amir PER: 17.3
Noel PER: 16.2

Amir WS: 7.3
Noel WS: 3.0

Amir FG%: .554
Noel FG%: .521

Amir VORP: 3.2
Noel VORP: 1.3

Amir BPM: 3.5
Noel BPM: 0.7

Noel has a few more pts, rebs and ca. 1 steal (and turnover) more per game. In what world did Noel had the better year?

Also, FYI the numbers Noel put as a rookie are pretty standard for a good rookie center that gets playing time.  If you want 'historical' look up Timmy's or KAT's numbers.

Noel averaged over 2 steals and 2 blocks per 36, which are historically good defensive numbers for a rookie center that Towns didn't even come close to. That's what I was talking about, and it's certainly true. Further, sure, if you don't want to take into context the teams that each were playing on, you can make an argument with certain advanced stats that Amir's *best* year was about equal to Noel's rookie year, even though Noel was better pretty much across the board than Amir in traditional stars. It's clear that Noel is a much better defender overall than Amir ever was, which is why they're both professionals, not due to their offense.

And this whole narrative of only considering next year is hogwash, too. First, he'd undoubtedly be better than Amir next year, because he's only getting better with more reps, especially on a much better team, while Amir is on the decline.  Second, he's a *restricted* free agent next year, so acting like we could just pick him up the next summer with no problem is naive and not true. If Embiid turns out to be a bust or gets injured again, which are decent chances, then Philly will lock Noel up long-term, and there's literally nothing we could do about it. Third, trading for him and getting his rights means that we could pay him more for longer, so it's absolutely not *just* about next year with acquiring Noel. Acquiring him through a trade might legitimately be the only way we can get him.

Look, we're not going to trade someone like Brown or Smart for Noel. It just doesn't make sense value-wise and with the context of everything considered. But something like Rozier, Young, and the Memphis pick is about right value for him, and it'd be absolutely worth it for us to do so. He'd give us the opportunity to be a historically good defensive team, and we'd have a shot at dethroning Cleveland with our superior perimeter and interior defense.

try again

and FYI in absolute numbers Noel had four (4) blocks more than KAT.

Noel is good but not as special as some of you make him look.

Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #292 on: August 18, 2016, 05:44:24 PM »

Offline Bucketgetter

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Tank... wut?

I Just explained why "if they want him they can just sign him" doesn't make sense.   Philly will match any offer.  Grabbing him now means we could still have cap space to go after a shooter like Hayward since Noel would only count as a 5.8 mil cap hold at the start of 2017 Free Agency.   If the goal is to grab Noel AND target a shooter like Hayward next Summer, they can't accomplish that without trading for Noel now. 

Also, I'm in no way advocating trading all our assets for Noel.   I wish we could get Noel for what Ainge has been reportedly willing to offer.
Absolutely not true.
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Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #293 on: August 18, 2016, 05:51:25 PM »

Offline jpotter33

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I see all this talk about Noel being a defensive powerhouse etc

If you see his numbers per 36 mins they are very close to those of Amir (with the diff that Amir has a much better FG%)

First remark, how is Noel supposed to fill a hole in our roster when we already have a player who does most of what Noel does in the defensive end.

Second remark, No, this is not worth a #3 pick.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=1&p1=johnsam01&p2=noelne01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=#per_minute::none
Noel will get better Amir is who he is. Plus CBS is a great coach. Brown TBD.

Unless you have foreknowledge of the future, the most you can say is that there is reason to hope Noel will get better because he is still 22yo. His game is based on athleticism rather than skill anyway, so the margin for improvement is not as big as many think.

But this is hardly relevant since Noel's contract expires in one year - so who cares even if Noel is an All Star 3-4 years from now?
As it is, we will be trading for a one year rental of a more athletic Amir who can't score. Doesn't move the needle much.

As for giving up Brown for Noel, I hope you are kidding. Sure, Brown's value is to be determined. But he is under contract until 2020. This means that if Brown turns out as good as Ainge hoped when he drafted him at #3, he still doesn't get to pay him any more than the 5 mill already agreed.  Our room for trades/signing FAs is already getting limited and it will be even more so as our rookies become RFAs. Ppl have to get used to the idea that we do not have infinite money to spend as we did the last three seasons, esp. on long term projects. What this team needs to get to the next level is one or two more players in or near the top-20, like Horford.

Come on. That is ridiculously reaching. Noel put up historical numbers as a rookie on the defensive end, and he's been hampered by a historically bad 76ers team his whole career. There's a reason one was drafted sixth (even with a torn ACL) and the other was drafted 56th out of high school. Noel's ceiling is much higher than Amir's ever was, and the fact that his statistical output in two years is already better than most of Amir's career is evidence of this.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=1&p1=noelne01&p2=johnsam01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=

Even Amir's best year is worse than Nerlens' past year, so this entire line of arguments seems totally off-base.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=0&y1=2013&p1=johnsam01&y2=2016&p2=noelne01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=

First of all, just to be clear: what I am saying is that it is unlikely that next season's Noel will be significantly better than Amir. I only care about what Noel will give in the one year that remains in his contract - ceiling is irrelevant.

Second, have you even gone through the link you sent me allegedly comparing their two best seasons?

Amir PER: 17.3
Noel PER: 16.2

Amir WS: 7.3
Noel WS: 3.0

Amir FG%: .554
Noel FG%: .521

Amir VORP: 3.2
Noel VORP: 1.3

Amir BPM: 3.5
Noel BPM: 0.7

Noel has a few more pts, rebs and ca. 1 steal (and turnover) more per game. In what world did Noel had the better year?

Also, FYI the numbers Noel put as a rookie are pretty standard for a good rookie center that gets playing time.  If you want 'historical' look up Timmy's or KAT's numbers.

Noel averaged over 2 steals and 2 blocks per 36, which are historically good defensive numbers for a rookie center that Towns didn't even come close to. That's what I was talking about, and it's certainly true. Further, sure, if you don't want to take into context the teams that each were playing on, you can make an argument with certain advanced stats that Amir's *best* year was about equal to Noel's rookie year, even though Noel was better pretty much across the board than Amir in traditional stars. It's clear that Noel is a much better defender overall than Amir ever was, which is why they're both professionals, not due to their offense.

And this whole narrative of only considering next year is hogwash, too. First, he'd undoubtedly be better than Amir next year, because he's only getting better with more reps, especially on a much better team, while Amir is on the decline.  Second, he's a *restricted* free agent next year, so acting like we could just pick him up the next summer with no problem is naive and not true. If Embiid turns out to be a bust or gets injured again, which are decent chances, then Philly will lock Noel up long-term, and there's literally nothing we could do about it. Third, trading for him and getting his rights means that we could pay him more for longer, so it's absolutely not *just* about next year with acquiring Noel. Acquiring him through a trade might legitimately be the only way we can get him.

Look, we're not going to trade someone like Brown or Smart for Noel. It just doesn't make sense value-wise and with the context of everything considered. But something like Rozier, Young, and the Memphis pick is about right value for him, and it'd be absolutely worth it for us to do so. He'd give us the opportunity to be a historically good defensive team, and we'd have a shot at dethroning Cleveland with our superior perimeter and interior defense.

try again

and FYI in absolute numbers Noel had four (4) blocks more than KAT.

Noel is good but not as special as some of you make him look.

Dude, what are you smoking?? Lol Your link literally just proved what I said - no other rookie "averaged over 2 steals and 2 blocks per 36, which are historically good defensive numbers for a rookie center that Towns didn't even come close to."

Noel per 36 - 2.2 Blk, 2.1 Stl (His real average in 30.8 MPG was 1.9 Blk and 1.8 Stl, so it's not an issue with extrapolation either.)

Towns per 36 - 1.9 Blk, 0.8 Stl...... It's not even a contest! Lol You can't just focus on one stat that fits your argument when I'm talking about two stats in particular (and overall defense). Noel is clearly a better overall defender than Towns, though Towns is the overall much, much better player.

And the only person who really even came close to that benchmark is David Robinson, who was hardly a rookie at age 24 compared to age 20 for Noel.

Robinson per 36 - 3.8 Blk, 1.7 Stl. And nobody is coming even close to comparing him to Robinson.

So I literally don't even know what you're arguing at this point. I've only said that Noel is an elite defender, not overall player, which the statistics back up.
« Last Edit: August 18, 2016, 06:00:25 PM by jpotter33 »
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Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #294 on: August 18, 2016, 05:53:52 PM »

Offline jpotter33

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Tank... wut?

I Just explained why "if they want him they can just sign him" doesn't make sense.   Philly will match any offer.  Grabbing him now means we could still have cap space to go after a shooter like Hayward since Noel would only count as a 5.8 mil cap hold at the start of 2017 Free Agency.   If the goal is to grab Noel AND target a shooter like Hayward next Summer, they can't accomplish that without trading for Noel now. 

Also, I'm in no way advocating trading all our assets for Noel.   I wish we could get Noel for what Ainge has been reportedly willing to offer.
Absolutely not true.

Totally depends on Embiid. They will certainly keep Noel at all costs if there's any more setbacks with Embiid or he doesn't play to standard this year. And even if Embiid looks fine next year, they'll still have interest in retaining Noel as a backup, though certainly not at max money.
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Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #295 on: August 18, 2016, 05:57:57 PM »

Offline LarBrd33

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Tank... wut?

I Just explained why "if they want him they can just sign him" doesn't make sense.   Philly will match any offer.  Grabbing him now means we could still have cap space to go after a shooter like Hayward since Noel would only count as a 5.8 mil cap hold at the start of 2017 Free Agency.   If the goal is to grab Noel AND target a shooter like Hayward next Summer, they can't accomplish that without trading for Noel now. 

Also, I'm in no way advocating trading all our assets for Noel.   I wish we could get Noel for what Ainge has been reportedly willing to offer.
Absolutely not true.

Totally depends on Embiid. They will certainly keep Noel at all costs if there's any more setbacks with Embiid or he doesn't play to standard this year. And even if Embiid looks fine next year, they'll still have interest in retaining Noel as a backup, though certainly not at max money.

The only reason I can imagine them letting him walk is if his season is a complete disaster, he does nothing for the team, nobody wants anything to do with him, and free agency comes and nobody makes any offers.  It would have to be a Sullinger situation.  Otherwise, if teams show interest and offer contracts, they might as well match.  They aren't close the salary floor.  They would be able to move Noel at the deadline 2018.

Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #296 on: August 18, 2016, 05:59:44 PM »

Offline bogg

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Tank... wut?

I Just explained why "if they want him they can just sign him" doesn't make sense.   Philly will match any offer.  Grabbing him now means we could still have cap space to go after a shooter like Hayward since Noel would only count as a 5.8 mil cap hold at the start of 2017 Free Agency.   If the goal is to grab Noel AND target a shooter like Hayward next Summer, they can't accomplish that without trading for Noel now. 

Also, I'm in no way advocating trading all our assets for Noel.   I wish we could get Noel for what Ainge has been reportedly willing to offer.

Again, Noel will force his way out of Philly before they even have a chance to match an offer. Any idea that they can simply keep all three bigs indefinitely if they don't get an offer they like is hopelessly naive. If there's any problem with the idea that Boston can just sign him it's that Houston, and not Philly, will be matching, but that just means you have to beat an offer built around Trevor Ariza, not that you have to meet Philly's asking price.

Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #297 on: August 18, 2016, 06:04:47 PM »

Offline SHAQATTACK

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20 page tweet.

Masterful

Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #298 on: August 18, 2016, 06:22:15 PM »

Offline bogg

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20 page tweet.

Masterful

It's more turned into 20 pages of discussing a theoretical Noel trade than any specific thing he did on twitter. It's no secret he's available and Boston's talked to Philly about their bigs in one capacity or another.

Re: Nerlens Noel Tweet- Overreaction Time
« Reply #299 on: August 18, 2016, 07:01:44 PM »

Offline greece66

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I see all this talk about Noel being a defensive powerhouse etc

If you see his numbers per 36 mins they are very close to those of Amir (with the diff that Amir has a much better FG%)

First remark, how is Noel supposed to fill a hole in our roster when we already have a player who does most of what Noel does in the defensive end.

Second remark, No, this is not worth a #3 pick.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=1&p1=johnsam01&p2=noelne01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=#per_minute::none
Noel will get better Amir is who he is. Plus CBS is a great coach. Brown TBD.

Unless you have foreknowledge of the future, the most you can say is that there is reason to hope Noel will get better because he is still 22yo. His game is based on athleticism rather than skill anyway, so the margin for improvement is not as big as many think.

But this is hardly relevant since Noel's contract expires in one year - so who cares even if Noel is an All Star 3-4 years from now?
As it is, we will be trading for a one year rental of a more athletic Amir who can't score. Doesn't move the needle much.

As for giving up Brown for Noel, I hope you are kidding. Sure, Brown's value is to be determined. But he is under contract until 2020. This means that if Brown turns out as good as Ainge hoped when he drafted him at #3, he still doesn't get to pay him any more than the 5 mill already agreed.  Our room for trades/signing FAs is already getting limited and it will be even more so as our rookies become RFAs. Ppl have to get used to the idea that we do not have infinite money to spend as we did the last three seasons, esp. on long term projects. What this team needs to get to the next level is one or two more players in or near the top-20, like Horford.

Come on. That is ridiculously reaching. Noel put up historical numbers as a rookie on the defensive end, and he's been hampered by a historically bad 76ers team his whole career. There's a reason one was drafted sixth (even with a torn ACL) and the other was drafted 56th out of high school. Noel's ceiling is much higher than Amir's ever was, and the fact that his statistical output in two years is already better than most of Amir's career is evidence of this.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=1&p1=noelne01&p2=johnsam01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=

Even Amir's best year is worse than Nerlens' past year, so this entire line of arguments seems totally off-base.

http://www.basketball-reference.com/play-index/pcm_finder.cgi?request=1&sum=0&y1=2013&p1=johnsam01&y2=2016&p2=noelne01&p3=&p4=&p5=&p6=

First of all, just to be clear: what I am saying is that it is unlikely that next season's Noel will be significantly better than Amir. I only care about what Noel will give in the one year that remains in his contract - ceiling is irrelevant.

Second, have you even gone through the link you sent me allegedly comparing their two best seasons?

Amir PER: 17.3
Noel PER: 16.2

Amir WS: 7.3
Noel WS: 3.0

Amir FG%: .554
Noel FG%: .521

Amir VORP: 3.2
Noel VORP: 1.3

Amir BPM: 3.5
Noel BPM: 0.7

Noel has a few more pts, rebs and ca. 1 steal (and turnover) more per game. In what world did Noel had the better year?

Also, FYI the numbers Noel put as a rookie are pretty standard for a good rookie center that gets playing time.  If you want 'historical' look up Timmy's or KAT's numbers.

Noel averaged over 2 steals and 2 blocks per 36, which are historically good defensive numbers for a rookie center that Towns didn't even come close to. That's what I was talking about, and it's certainly true. Further, sure, if you don't want to take into context the teams that each were playing on, you can make an argument with certain advanced stats that Amir's *best* year was about equal to Noel's rookie year, even though Noel was better pretty much across the board than Amir in traditional stars. It's clear that Noel is a much better defender overall than Amir ever was, which is why they're both professionals, not due to their offense.

And this whole narrative of only considering next year is hogwash, too. First, he'd undoubtedly be better than Amir next year, because he's only getting better with more reps, especially on a much better team, while Amir is on the decline.  Second, he's a *restricted* free agent next year, so acting like we could just pick him up the next summer with no problem is naive and not true. If Embiid turns out to be a bust or gets injured again, which are decent chances, then Philly will lock Noel up long-term, and there's literally nothing we could do about it. Third, trading for him and getting his rights means that we could pay him more for longer, so it's absolutely not *just* about next year with acquiring Noel. Acquiring him through a trade might legitimately be the only way we can get him.

Look, we're not going to trade someone like Brown or Smart for Noel. It just doesn't make sense value-wise and with the context of everything considered. But something like Rozier, Young, and the Memphis pick is about right value for him, and it'd be absolutely worth it for us to do so. He'd give us the opportunity to be a historically good defensive team, and we'd have a shot at dethroning Cleveland with our superior perimeter and interior defense.

try again

and FYI in absolute numbers Noel had four (4) blocks more than KAT.

Noel is good but not as special as some of you make him look.

Dude, what are you smoking?? Lol Your link literally just proved what I said - no other rookie "averaged over 2 steals and 2 blocks per 36, which are historically good defensive numbers for a rookie center that Towns didn't even come close to."

Noel per 36 - 2.2 Blk, 2.1 Stl (His real average in 30.8 MPG was 1.9 Blk and 1.8 Stl, so it's not an issue with extrapolation either.)

Towns per 36 - 1.9 Blk, 0.8 Stl...... It's not even a contest! Lol You can't just focus on one stat that fits your argument when I'm talking about two stats in particular (and overall defense). Noel is clearly a better overall defender than Towns, though Towns is the overall much, much better player.

And the only person who really even came close to that benchmark is David Robinson, who was hardly a rookie at age 24 compared to age 20 for Noel.

Robinson per 36 - 3.8 Blk, 1.7 Stl. And nobody is coming even close to comparing him to Robinson.

So I literally don't even know what you're arguing at this point. I've only said that Noel is an elite defender, not overall player, which the statistics back up.
'Dude, what are you smoking?? Lol '

^keep that kind of comments for your friends and acquaintances. Thank you.

We both know the only reason you add steals to the conversation is bcs it helps your case. I don't remember you bringing up steals in other threads when comparing rim protectors.

A Manute Bol  or Mark Eaton fan could similarly claim that no one else had at least 6.5 blks and 6 Drebs.

By saying this, I am not dismissing the value of steals but reminding you what the C's needs are at this stage and what which are traditionally seen as indicators of a good rim protector (blocks and DRebs).
That Noel averages one steal more that most NBA bigs is nice, but does not bring him any closer to the other bigs in the link: Mourning, Hakeem, Duncan...

Another thing to consider is that playing for Philly helps your stats. Other teams relax and/or play their second unit more mins with Philly.

And two final points: first, if Noel is as good as you say, then why Philly would like to trade him for cheap?
Your own suggestion is Young, Rozier and the Memphis pick. ofc we would all like to have him at this price, but no one outside the Celtics Blog Forums thinks this is the price Philly will ask. 

And second, no matter how 'historical' a defender he is, he makes lots of turnovers, and is p weak at the offensive end. Not sure how a big who cannot pass or shoot would fit in Stevens system. But again, if Rozier, Young and a late first rounder is all it takes to get him, I would welcome him with open arms.

PS will I ever have an answer on how Noel's best season was better than Amir's?
I guessed as much.