Moranis, oly is coming off a season averaging 20 minutes. Do you find it unfathomable he will end up averaging 30+ at some point in his career? I think it's possible. You might be right in that it will not happen here. Could be a situation like Courtney Lee or tony Allen where he leaves Boston and finds a starting role elsewhere... But I believe Kelly has it in him. And with more minutes and more touches, I think we'd both agree his stats would increase. The greater production would be labeled "a breakthrough" even if his level of play remained the same. Isn't that why the "Playoff Rondo" myth started? It's easy to have more stats when you are averaging 44 minutes per night in the playoffs.
There's a chance oly's opportunity happens this season. But maybe he just backs up Horford and Amir. The thing is, he's possibly the best shooter on the entire team. The team lacks shooting. I'd be interested in giving our best shooter more than 8 shot attempts per night.
no the playoff Rondo myth started because Rondo was more focused and tried harder more consistently in the playoffs, but he still had his terrible games where he didn't do much of anything. That isn't the case with KO. He is just an average player. I don't expect KO to ever get anywhere near 30 minutes a night, especially in Boston. He is just too inconsistent, I mean just look at December, that is pretty representative of typical KO. 28 points in 37 minutes on 52% shooting one night to the very next game shooting 31% in 23 minutes scoring 8 points, to 5 points on 29% shooting in 22 minutes, to 0 points in 16 minutes, to 8 points in 15 minutes on 60% all in the span of 8 days. That is typical KO. No consistency at all and that is why he won't be more than what he is.
http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/o/olynyke01/gamelog/2016/
or
http://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/2489663/kelly-olynyk
Man... arguing about Rondo is so retro.
Rondo's career per-36: 12 points, 9.5 assists, 5.3 rebounds, 2 steals with 47%/29%/61% shooting.
Playoff Rondo per-36: 13.6 points, 8.6 assists, 5.6 rebounds, 1.8 steals, 45%/28%/65% shooting.
Same [dang] player. Getting 44 minutes a night inflated his stats. Everyone remembers that break-out 2012 playoff performance where he put up per-36 of 14.6 points, 10.1 assists, 5.7 rebounds and 2 steals. While it was slightly better, it wasn't really all that much different than his stats the following regular season of 13.2 points, 10.6 assists, 5.4 rebounds, 1.8 steals per-36.
Role/touches makes a difference.
Olynyk has had to balance minutes with other bigs. Whether that has been Bass, Sully, Zeller, Lee, etc... you're right in that he hasn't received a consistent run of starter minutes, but I still do wonder how much of that was because we were showcasing different players or just trying to balance a lot of comparable-level guys at once.
Consider Olynyk has consistently put up per-36 stats of 16.6 points, 8.1 rebounds, 2.8 assists, 1.3 steals with 47%/37%/75% shooting... and that his stats didn't take a hit in any of the past three seasons during games in which he was fed more minutes.
In 18 career games in which he's received 30-39 miutes he's averaged 18.2 points, 7.8 rebounds and 2.6 assists with 56%/41%/80% shooting.
In his 30 career starts, he's averaged 12 points, 6.4 rebounds, 2.2 assists with 50%/42%/78% shooting in 26.7mpg
I still fail to see why Olynyk couldn't put up 15+ points in 30+ minutes at some point in his career and have it labelled "a breakthrough" season. And I wouldn't at all be surprised to see it happen this year. I'll be curious to see how he fits next to Horford. It might work. He's arguably the best shooter on the team, has consistently been towards the top of the team in PER, and depending on how it works defensively this might be his year to finally take a bigger role.