Also TS% is my least favorite stat along with per36, (people use this on players that barely average 10 MPG..) It always unfairly rates free throw highly..
That being said, Hayward shot 39.8% 3P, and got to the line 5 times per game. Something that Tatum will eventually get past in 1-2 years, but I'm not convinced that he will score a lot either. Our offense relies on moving and sharing the ball.
Agree about the ball movement part. However, while Hayward's career 3pt percentage and FT percentage are a very respectable .368 and .82, these are both numbers Tatum eclipsed as a rookie.
Why do you keep using his career average numbers instead of his most recent season (or two)? Hayward is not the same player he was when he came into the league, so why include those years (unless your goal is just to deflate his numbers)?
Because he is turning 29 this season, playing on a team with three bonafide scorers, and is coming off a significant injury. Considering all that, do you think it's reasonable to simply use Hayward's career season numbers on bad Utah teams where he was the number one option?
As an analogy, when Kevin Love was in his prime with the Wolves he was averaging 26ppg. His four seasons with the Cavs, however, he has averaged 17.1ppg with 19.0ppg the highest in 2016-17. Should we expect K-Love to start putting up 25ppg next season if he is still playing on the Cavs with the same team dynamic?
To address the second half you added: where did you get that idea? I would take his most recent season (or two), and say that, in the same role next year, he should be averaging about 18ppg. Taking his career average (which includes his 11 ppg rookie season and 25ppg monster seasons) doesn't make any sense
If Lebron leaves and his role changes, I'd use the past couple of years as a baseline and guess from there.
I honestly have no clue what your basing my apparent Kevin Love projection of 25ppg from
That's what I am saying. In 2013-14 Love averaged 26.1ppg for the Wolves. The following year on the Cavs he averaged 16.4ppg, nearly a 10ppg decrease. According to your logic, you would have been expecting Love to average 26.1ppg on the Cavs for the 2014-15 season because those were his stats the prior year.
So, you're ignoring what I'm actually saying.
When a player has a change in role, you don't ignore it, you take it into consideration. But that doesn't mean using their career average. Changing the role you have isn't going to make you the average of all your seasons in the NBA, it will make you the player you were, but in a different role.
If that involves being a 2nd or 3rd option instead of 1st, your USG% and points will likely go down, while efficiency increases. If that means being the 1st option instead of the 2nd or 3rd, your USG% and points will likely go up, while your efficiency decreases.