Eastoff
But it was a beginning.
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2009
- Messages
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damn conservatives.
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damn conservatives.
He seems like someone who could compliment our other players well. He can spot up and shoot the 3 or beat his man off the dribble. He's fast and agrressive which makes him a good candidate to guard the Tony Parkers and Chris Pauls of the league.
I like his strengths:
From DraftExpress:
STRENGTHS:
- Go-to scoring mentality
- Transition play
- Ability to create own shot
- Ball-handling skills
- Ability to get in passing lanes
- Aggressiveness
- Strong Intangibles
- Ability to finish around basket
- Above average athleticism
- Speed
- 3-point range
- Solid free throw shooter
He seems like someone who could compliment our other players well. He can spot up and shoot the 3 or beat his man off the dribble. He's fast and agrressive which makes him a good candidate to guard the Tony Parkers and Chris Pauls of the league. He may not be able to jump into the starting PG role now but he could be a solid back up.
He can spot up and shoot the 3 alright. He just has trouble making it. 3-point range is not the same as 3-point accuracy. He shot 7.6 3-pointers per game last season in college. That's a hell of a lot of 3-pointers. Too bad he missed 5.0 of those 7.6 per game - and that's from the shorter college 3-point line.
I just don't get the fan-boy love for some of these PGs who can't shoot and can't defend. Jerryd Bayless averaged more APG at a younger age against much tougher competition - while playing SG in his one season at Arizona. He also averaged more PPG, fewer TO/G and shot the ball better overall, and a hell of a lot better from 3-point range. And, he's actually big enough to guard someone in the NBA. Yet, for some inexplicable reason Mills is our PG of the future.
Let me say that again - 19-year old Jerryd Bayless, playing SG, against much tougher competition, scored more, shot the ball much better from 3-point range, averaged more assists and had a better assist-to-TO ratio 21-year old Patty Mills playing PG against very week competition in the WCC.
BNM
He can spot up and shoot the 3 alright. He just has trouble making it. 3-point range is not the same as 3-point accuracy. He shot 7.6 3-pointers per game last season in college. That's a hell of a lot of 3-pointers. Too bad he missed 5.0 of those 7.6 per game - and that's from the shorter college 3-point line.
I don't know if he can defend but he can shoot:I just don't get the fan-boy love for some of these PGs who can't shoot and can't defend.
Mills handled the ball on a string all game long, showing terrific quickness keeping his man off balance, and making an absolute living in the mid-range area with his deadly pull-up jumper. His ability to utilize strong hesitation moves makes him extremely difficult to stay in front of, and he did a good job not settling for tough shots from beyond the arc today, getting to the line repeatedly.
Jerryd Bayless averaged more APG at a younger age against much tougher competition - while playing SG in his one season at Arizona. He also averaged more PPG, fewer TO/G and shot the ball better overall, and a hell of a lot better from 3-point range. And, he's actually big enough to guard someone in the NBA. Yet, for some inexplicable reason Mills is our PG of the future.
Let me say that again - 19-year old Jerryd Bayless, playing SG, against much tougher competition, scored more, shot the ball much better from 3-point range, averaged more assists and had a better assist-to-TO ratio 21-year old Patty Mills playing PG against very week competition in the WCC.
Spot on.I don't see Mills as our PG of the future or even starting in the NBA but he could be a great guard off the bench to change the tempo of the game.
Spot on.
And I don't see anyone claiming that he's our PGOTF; just people using hyperbole to try to prove a point.
Statements such as:
WEAKNESSES:
- Decision making
- Settles for bad shots
- Shot-selection
- Low shooting percentages
Fail to take into account that Mills is just doing what the coach has instructed him to do.
If the coach tell him to pass, that's what he'll do. If the coach tells him to shoot, that's what he'll do. If the coach tells him to penetrate, that's what he'll do.
What he will never do, is put himself above the team.
