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Clips from the ESPN article. Highly recommend insider if you don't already have it:
Let's take a look at how he measures up to what some of the current point guard stars did as rookies:
First, let's look at the pure physical side of the question...Lillard simply does not measure up to these guys (ed: Westbrook, Rose, Holiday, Bledsoe). Of course, no other point guards do either. He has decent measurements but is not the physical force on the court these guys are, nor does he have anything close to their explosiveness (other than Holiday, who still ranks better than Lillard in this category). Westbrook, Rose and Bledsoe have been compared to LeBron James in terms of their athleticism for their position. That will never happen with Lillard, nor will he ever look like a big forward playing point guard like Holiday sometimes does.
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Next let's look at point guards who possess extraordinary quickness, such as Lawson, Jennings, Teague and Wall....Lillard is clearly quick and fast, but he is not in the range of Lawson, Jennings, Teague and Wall. He's closer to this group than he is the first group, but still a quarter-step behind them. That is fast enough, though, to help him get 41 percent of his shots off in 10 seconds or less. Because it's about quickness to the rim in the half court, not just speed, and craft with the ball plays a factor, too.
Lillard finishes 53 percent of his rim shots, better than the smaller and slighter Jennings, but well behind the blurs of Teague (61 percent) and Lawson (64 percent). As Lillard is just a rookie, we can expect these numbers to go up a bit over time.
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Those who are not super quick or ultra-athletic must then be incredibly skilled if they want to be special players at this position. Curry is already an amazing shooter...Walker is very quick, but it's his handle that is special...Rubio is passing personified, capable of making every offensive player a bigger threat simply because of the way he can lead guys to easy buckets....Irving, finally, is the perfect combination of size, skill, feel and overall ambition to be great...This is where Portland fans can rise and cheer, because Irving is the guy Lillard can be most like, especially if he can match Irving's drive to be the best.
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None of the guys on this list are special passers, save Wall and Rubio...Lillard is in the big group of solid and willing passers, someone who will improve on his overall passing and game management, but he's likely not a player who will be known for his ability to pass.
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Lillard is terrific, as a rookie, at all these things. He's excellent in the pick-and-roll game, patient in his game-managing as he lets plays develop, and aware that he must score for his team to win. He's not the shooter Irving is, or Curry, but he is far better than Rose, Westbrook or Wall were at their rookie age, and maybe even today.
We still have a lot to study as Lillard plays out the season, and we won't know much about his defensive talents for another season or two. But it's clear he has a chance to get to the level of Rose, Westbrook or Irving, which is saying a lot. The Trail Blazers, as a franchise, have to be pleased that their pick has, at least, the talent and upside to be a potential All-Star.
He projects to be better than many of the starting guards who have entered the league in the past five seasons or so. And his rookie season has the potential to measure up to -- and even exceed -- them all, which is huge when you consider how marvelous Irving was just a season ago.
