Not sure but Suggs rumors were on Twitter last night as the Magic took two guards.Are they also open to moving Cole Anthony, or just Suggs? Suggs is pretty interesting as a guy you could play as an understudy.
Not sure but Suggs rumors were on Twitter last night as the Magic took two guards.Are they also open to moving Cole Anthony, or just Suggs? Suggs is pretty interesting as a guy you could play as an understudy.
There are probably 20 point guards that are better than him, I can't see any way he is as high as even 50th in the leagueI think Marcus is somewhere between the 50th and 35th best player in the league
You have to really, really like his defensive versatility and performance to put him that high. I just didn't see that he was that guy last year. Maybe he'll get back to it in Memphis, but right now it's like he has the versatility on both ends, but without the primary ooomph (creating offense, guarding his own position as opposed to a couple spots up).There are probably 20 point guards that are better than him, I can't see any way he is as high as even 50th in the league
I think to call someone even a borderline All-Star he should have made at least one All-Star team.For what it's worth, I'm on Team InstaFace here as it pertains to Marcus Smart. I think Marcus is somewhere between the 50th and 35th best player in the league, and a borderline All-Star when he's at his best. I
He kinda looks like an upper middle class man's Nikola Jokic, doesn't he? Similar skill profile: agility, not relying on sheer strength but also very multi-dimensional on offense. He's not the passer Jokic is (who is), but it's a strength and opponents can't help on him without risking a pass for a wide open shot.All that said, the deal is a steal on paper and they had to do it. Porzingis seems to have been written off; I wrote him off myself for a while. But he's just had the best year of his career, and while there's this idea floating around that big men are totally fungible, the truth is that a center who can space the floor AND protect the rim is the queen on the chess board. They're like a tight end who is a great blocker and a great, athletic receiver: they allow you to do so many different things offensively and defensively with the same group. Prime Al Horford was that guy, but he can't be asked to do that for 35 minutes a night anymore.
The reporting so far is that he's down to sign an extension this summer. His max is 2/77, which is about 25% of the cap next year. That's totally fine for this caliber of player.He kinda looks like an upper middle class man's Nikola Jokic, doesn't he? Similar skill profile: agility, not relying on sheer strength but also very multi-dimensional on offense. He's not the passer Jokic is (who is), but it's a strength and opponents can't help on him without risking a pass for a wide open shot.
During the ill-fated comeback in the Miami series, we were wondering how the hell we were possibly going to match up with Denver. As we saw, their size was just too much for Miami, to say nothing of being able to slow down Jokic. The only guy who even slowed him down a little in the playoffs was Anthony Davis. But given their styles, I bet Kris can do about as well as anyone against Jokic. And it gives us the size to go toe to toe with Denver.
There's really so much to like here, other than the contract we're going to have to give KP after this year. I just wish we could rent back Smart for a season or two, too![]()
I suspect KP would not have opted-in to his final year without some assurances he'd receive the extension.The reporting so far is that he's down to sign an extension this summer. His max is 2/77, which is about 25% of the cap next year. That's totally fine for this caliber of player.
Porzingis is definitely a risk, but one thing I think is important to note is that he has pretty drastically improved his game the last few years. He's committed far more to being a capable player in the post. He's started to use his height more effectively in just shooting over smaller defenders (the Durant), and he's improved as a roll man in PnR, where he used to be purely a pop guy. On D, he's gotten better at positioning and not chasing blocks.This trade really feels like the first Stevens White Whale if the reporting about the process around it (having the Grizzlies/Smart option as a backup) is accurate.
Brad just really wanted Porzingis and if you get the 2023 version its easy to see why. That said, 2023 is top-tick Porzingis in terms of games played and more importantly production.
There are risks to everything in life but for this particular transaction they include injuries as well as Porzingis reverting to less efficient offensive production. Last season really looks like an outlier so people should probably expect something more like a 56% TS and 35-36% from deep. Its still decent and maybe he gets more efficient on a talented Cs roster but I would bet on retracement here.
I've watched him play a bit so what you are saying tracks.Porzingis is definitely a risk, but one thing I think is important to note is that he has pretty drastically improved his game the last few years. He's committed far more to being a capable player in the post. He's started to use his height more effectively in just shooting over smaller defenders (the Durant), and he's improved as a roll man in PnR, where he used to be purely a pop guy. On D, he's gotten better at positioning and not chasing blocks.
People missed some of it because all of the injuries and the disappointing pairing with Luka mixed in, but quietly he's been really improving his skillset and maturing as a player.
But here's what I think you're missing: he'd be betting Smart's games-played production and health was sustainable too if he kept him.I've watched him play a bit so what you are saying tracks.
But again, last season was his best year in terms of output and GP. Stevens is betting that this is all sustainable. We can dream of banners but its also possible that he reverts more to the player he has been for most of his career across a 40-50 games played season.
That may be perfectly fine too but its also not some of the rosy production that's been largely assumed here.
I feel the need to push back on the games played narrative, as I think it's far more nuanced than simply saying he's averaging 40-50 games per season.I've watched him play a bit so what you are saying tracks.
But again, last season was his best year in terms of output and GP. Stevens is betting that this is all sustainable. We can dream of banners but its also possible that he reverts more to the player he has been for most of his career across a 40-50 games played season.
That may be perfectly fine too but its also not some of the rosy production that's been largely assumed here.
I agree, but I dont focus on the games missed, as much the games played/mileage on the clock. Someone's Pedroia comp is quite close. (or as close as you can get comparing these two sports). I think that, in his head, Stevens combined what he was losing in Smart today (considerable) with how he was projecting him going forward --- which (probably) was along the lines of "we've seen the best of him and at his age and mileage, he can't keep going at the pace he needs to go at to make him as valuable as his best self. At least not for long." I think the (legitimate) questions about whether the Celtics will get "the best of Porzingis" going forward are almost offset by the question of whether (or how often) the Celtics were going to get "the best of Marcus" going forward. Given his (IMO) offensive maturation, but defensive decline, Marcus seems to be a prime example of a player whose body starts going south just as his head "has all the test answers." (h/t that Brady guy).But here's what I think you're missing: he'd be betting Smart's games-played production and health was sustainable too if he kept him.
I would argue that the guy (Smart) they traded for him has also missed a lot of time in his career.
TraeThe recency bias thing is an out of control forest fire at this point.
Atlanta: 49%FG, 38%3PT 16/4/5 2Stl 2TO
Philly: 44% 34% 15/4/5 1Stl 3TO
Miami: 43% 36% 13/4/5 1 2
Clearly, he fell off during the Philly series after what was rumored to be an injury. But I'm not sure why the Atlanta series doesn't count.. The rush to drive guys to the airport after a bad series like Tatum's finals last year or Brown/Smart's later playoffs this year is bizarre to me. And I like the trade.
How will we know if this is true? And what happens if the C's play better as a team next year.. does it mean that Marcus wasn't the heart of the team? How is that measured?Creighton had me up until the part about the Kendrick Perkins trade looking right on paper. That didn't feel right even on paper for one second.
Marcus Smart gave everything he had to the Boston Celtics. The trade feels like a betrayal to me and I can only hope that it doesn't rip the heart of the team. I fear it will.
Struggling with this paragraph:
Is the bolded sentence missing a "not" (i.e., "would not be wise") or is the insinuation that Porzingis is such a good shooter on contested threes that his down year on uncontested looks is probably anomalous?According to Second Spectrum, Porzingis’s quantified shooter impact was plus-8.28 and his quantified shotmaking was plus-5.39 last season. That ranked 10th and first, respectively, among all players who took at least 1,000 field goals. Translation: He made way more shots than he was expected to. That means either that he’s established a new normal, or that he’s in for a downturn. The fact that Porzingis made only 30.77 percent of his uncontested 3s last season suggests that Boston would be wise to bank on Porzingis sustaining that performance—in an offense where he’ll spend plenty of time as the third or fourth option and will be able to operate against defenses that are more concerned with Tatum and Brown.
Yeah, guys buddies get traded all the time. If anything I wonder if there is some degree to which the idea that anyone could go but Marcus would be a bigger problem... Marcus was the 4th or 5th best player on this team, guaranteeing him a roster spot over better players sets up an idea that it's not a meritocracy, but instead it's who Brad likes.How will we know if this is true? And what happens if the C's play better as a team next year.. does it mean that Marcus wasn't the heart of the team? How is that measured?
I believe the argument is basically that he had a down year on uncontested 3s and that is a type of shot you expect to revert to the mean more than any other since it is not being impacted by defender play, so that was a "unlucky" rather than skill based number.Struggling with this paragraph:
Is the bolded sentence missing a "not" (i.e., "would not be wise") or is the insinuation that Porzingis is such a good shooter on contested threes that his down year on uncontested looks is probably anomalous?
It can be noticed if they are disorganized and ineffective on defense and lose several more games than this year or are bounced out of the playoffs early. If they play better as a team next year then obviously my fear will prove to be unfounded.How will we know if this is true? And what happens if the C's play better as a team next year.. does it mean that Marcus wasn't the heart of the team? How is that measured?
I think it's just poorly written. I'm reading it that they should bank on him "establishing a new normal" based on the fact that he hit a low % of uncontested threes. That abnormality cancels out him "making more shots than he expected to."Is the bolded sentence missing a "not" (i.e., "would not be wise") or is the insinuation that Porzingis is such a good shooter on contested threes that his down year on uncontested looks is probably anomalous?
To be fair, I'm calling out recency bias with that post, particularly that Marcus didn't have a bad playoffs. Marcus had 1.5 bad series, most likely related to an injury. Much like Tatum didn't suck in last year's playoffs--he sucked for 1 series.Trae
But yeah, hopefully this works out. I'm sure he'll be fine in Memphis.
The highlight video with all of the back cuts and KP passing out of the high post... I think Brown especially is going to have a field day on offense.Understandably, we’re all focused on how KP will help open up the floor for the Jays el al.
But I’m excited to see what KP does with the additional space he’s going to have when he’s out there with Tatum and Brown.
Just have him be healthy for the playoffs. Anything above that is gravy in my mind.Understandably, we’re all focused on how KP will help open up the floor for the Jays el al.
But I’m excited to see what KP does with the additional space he’s going to have when he’s out there with Tatum and Brown.
To my eye Marcus freelanced a lot on D.. for better or worse. At his best it was great.. but especially in the playoffs it seemed like it didn't work out at a number of key moments.It can be noticed if they are disorganized and ineffective on defense and lose several more games than this year or are bounced out of the playoffs early. If they play better as a team next year then obviously my fear will prove to be unfounded.
Yeah, I'm optimistic because I think it balances out our roster better & provides a lot more upside, but who knows?To be fair, I'm calling out recency bias with that post, particularly that Marcus didn't have a bad playoffs. Marcus had 1.5 bad series, most likely related to an injury. Much like Tatum didn't suck in last year's playoffs--he sucked for 1 series.
I'm being myopic here through. And this isn't aimed at you whatsoever, but some folks fall into different buckets than just the recency bias bucket. There's the "I never liked Marcus anyway" bucket. There's those that take as gospel the anti-Marcus bias on basketball twitterverse media. There are some that are so damned psyched about Porzingis that they're downplaying what Marcus can do. Calling out only the recency bias is too narrow. Hell, nobody was anti-Tatum last year really and just IMO dumped on his finals performance out of anger (and maybe some basketball twitterverse influence).
Marcus will be fine in Memphis, and the Celtics will be fine too.
Both of the above posts are correct in that Smart has missed time too and that 40-50 games may be light.
But they are also pushing back on the fact that Porzingis has had injury issues in his career. Maybe he is indeed past them and will give them 60-70 games. Maybe it won't matter either given their frontcourt depth. However its a risk along with Porzingis reverting to the less efficient version he has been for most of his career. I find that acknowledging both upside and downside outcomes to be helpful but I get that others prefer to assume max production.
I'm with Cellar-door. I'm fine with him playing 50-60, as I was willing to accept the possibility that Smart gets hurt and only plays 60 given what he added to the team. I'm willing to accept the possibility that Porzingis has a down-year offensively. But what Porzingis does bring to the table - a seven footer who knows how to protect the rim an defend the pick and roll - is just more valuable to me than Smart's free-safety stuff. And if the offensive improvement is real, than the upside for this deal is positively enormous.I don't assume max production from Porzingis. I think to me it's really simple... max production from Porzingis is a LOT better than the best of Marcus Smart. Healthy Porzingis for more than 65 games would be a top 20-25 player in the league, honestly..... probably better than Jaylen Brown. I assume less than full Porzingis, and think (especially with our roster) that's a really valuable piece. Same way Horford is really valuable, but can't bear a full time load. As long as you keep them realatively healthy come playoff time you have a significantly better shot at a title to me.
I would consider playing poorly in half the games/series to be not a particularly good overall performanceMarcus didn't have a bad playoffs. Marcus had 1.5 bad series,
Definitely agreed on this. For the last few years I've been hoping he turned into a jumbo version of Kyle Lowry. Lowry didn't make his first all star team until age 28 (in his 9th season) on his 3rd team, then made the all star game 6 straight times. If his shooting was just a little bit better, that could've been Marcus' future. Could still be I guess, but he's gonna be just as far down the offensive pecking order in Memphis, at best the 4th option behind Ja/Bane/JJJ.I think to call someone even a borderline All-Star he should have made at least one All-Star team.
That's fair.I would consider playing poorly in half the games/series to be not a particularly good overall performance
We already can't switch everything, we played drop a lot last year and will with Porzingis. In terms of team's hunting him.... good luck, it will likely go much like teams hunting prime Horford did. Sure occasionally you'll get a quick guy who beats him off the dribble, but mostly he'll just slide his feet, let you take the jumper with a 7'3" hand in your face.Is anyone at all concerned that when playoff time comes KP is going to be hunted mercilessly in the pick and roll? By losing Marcus and likely Grant we are going to lose a lot of our "switch everything" defensive identity. And KP, while a very good rim protector does not possess good lateral quickness on the perimeter. Maybe it's not a huge deal, Denver just won the championship with Jokic who has the same problem. But this is undoubtedly how the Celtics are going to be attacked in the playoffs. Let's hope he can hold his own out there and doesn't give up as much as he gives us.
Yeah, I mentioned this before but I am looking forward to seeing KP come off downscreens by a small or having JT and KP run PnR.I think the biggest thing KP will add is the ability to exploit mismatches. Boston's roster wasn't really equipped to really punish teams on a switch because that's just not what they do (in a way, the thing that makes them so switchable/versatile on defense limits them for the same reasons on offense). Tatum's not really a blow by guy athletically, and he's not often going to bully another player in the post because he favors face-ups. We've discussed ad nauseum Jaylen's limitations here, and none of White/Smart/Brogdon are the types to salivate when a big is switched onto them. Time Lord doesn't have a post game, and Al's has seemingly disintegrated with age and more focus on 3s.
So I don't think it'll be a regular part of the offense, but for the times (especially in the playoffs) when things are grinding down, it'll be nice to know that we can get a mismatch with KP on a small (like Strus/Lowry/Vincent) and let a team like Miami know that they can't get away with that. That's an element that they've been missing in high-leverage situations, and I think it's an important option that may not show up in season-long stats.
No more mercilessly than Jokic. I never thought a team with Jokic, Porter Jr., and Murray could win a championship because of their defensive shortcomings but the issue is not just to stop the opponents but it's to score more points than the opponents and DEN proved that they have an offense that is so efficient that it can make up for whatever defensive shortcomings their individual parts might have.Is anyone at all concerned that when playoff time comes KP is going to be hunted mercilessly in the pick and roll? By losing Marcus and likely Grant we are going to lose a lot of our "switch everything" defensive identity. And KP, while a very good rim protector does not possess good lateral quickness on the perimeter. Maybe it's not a huge deal, Denver just won the championship with Jokic who has the same problem. But this is undoubtedly how the Celtics are going to be attacked in the playoffs. Let's hope he can hold his own out there and doesn't give up as much as he gives us.
Guarded Harden better when JB fought over screens too.Honestly I thought last year we tried to switch too much, we gave worse matchups because we just surrendered a switch. It was a major topic in the Heat series early, that we let Butler get the matchups he wanted by switching everything, and we eventually went away from it and fought over more screens, played some drop, etc. Switch everything is tough to do well, and our past success with it was largely built on Horford being one of the most underrated defenders of all time.
It's honestly pretty amazing that for all the reputations of each, Jokic held up well enough in drop that Denver could hang, and Joel Embiid got cooked right out of the playoffs.Yeah, I mentioned this before but I am looking forward to seeing KP come off downscreens by a small or having JT and KP run PnR.
No more mercilessly than Jokic. I never thought a team with Jokic, Porter Jr., and Murray could win a championship because of their defensive shortcomings but the issue is not just to stop the opponents but it's to score more points than the opponents and DEN proved that they have an offense that is so efficient that it can make up for whatever defensive shortcomings their individual parts might have.
Damn, I will miss Smart. I hope Kristaps is worth it.Despite his faults, I loved about 90% of Marcus Smart and his game. He played hard and gave a shit.
If the Celts had 5 guys with his attitude and toughness they would have won championships.
And he took the no, no no shot.
And he missed sometimes.
BFD
I don't care about that he had the balls to take the shot.
Like my man Marcus I hope this trade is a no, no no and I hope a yes deal.
I don't assume max production from Porzingis. I think to me it's really simple... max production from Porzingis is a LOT better than the best of Marcus Smart. Healthy Porzingis for more than 65 games would be a top 20-25 player in the league, honestly..... probably better than Jaylen Brown. I assume less than full Porzingis, and think (especially with our roster) that's a really valuable piece. Same way Horford is really valuable, but can't bear a full time load. As long as you keep them realatively healthy come playoff time you have a significantly better shot at a title to me.
Listening to Lowe on his podcasts, I'm beginning to think that one of the reasons MIA shot so well against BOS and not against DEN was that DEN's offense put so much pressure on MIA to score that it affected MIA's shooting. MIA shot free and easy against BOS because they were confident they could get stops when they needed to.It's honestly pretty amazing that for all the reputations of each, Jokic held up well enough in drop that Denver could hang, and Joel Embiid got cooked right out of the playoffs.
Your point is a great one, and that plays into the C's end-of-game problems. Miami can get the ball to Butler, Philly to Embiid, Denver to Jokic, etc., and they'll generally either get a great shot for themselves or a teammate. The C's often have ended up settling for contested sidestep/stepback 3s by Tatum. As his post-up game continues to improve, that could generate higher-quality shots, but Porzingis should help immensely in the meantime.I mentioned this before but BOS doesn't have a set that they can run when they absolutely, positively know that they need a basket. They would usually run a Smart/JT screen because the weakest defender was on Smart but teams would hedge to JT and Smart wasn't good enough to regularly punish the way the defenses morphed.
I'm excited to see a JT/KP PnR. That should pose a ton of problems for defenses. A lot more than BOS can pose right now.
I think the end of game possessions thing is one where people's impressions are heavily biased but the emotion involved in those types of situations. I think statistically the Celtics were actually pretty good in those gotta have it contexts.Your point is a great one, and that plays into the C's end-of-game problems. Miami can get the ball to Butler, Philly to Embiid, Denver to Jokic, etc., and they'll generally either get a great shot for themselves or a teammate. The C's often have ended up settling for contested sidestep/stepback 3s by Tatum. As his post-up game continues to improve, that could generate higher-quality shots, but Porzingis should help immensely in the meantime.
Hasn't it been well-documented—by others, not by me—that the C's have struggled to score in late-game situations and then have been prone to losing sizable fourth-quarter leads? I don't think I'm making that up.I think the end of game possessions thing is one where people's impressions are heavily biased but the emotion involved in those types of situations. I think statistically the Celtics were actually pretty good in those gotta have it contexts.
Go watch how many Heat possessions had Butler throwing up garbage in close moments.
I was interpreting your post as the last minute one possession game type possessions. I agree they let leads slip chronically, but that is more of a minutes 6 - 1 issue.Hasn't it been well-documented—by others, not be me—that the C's have struggled to score in late-game situations and then have been prone to losing sizable fourth-quarter leads? I don't think I'm making that up.
I think people mean less the actual last play then late and close, Celtics were I believe the worst in the league late and close execution two years runningI think the end of game possessions thing is one where people's impressions are heavily biased but the emotion involved in those types of situations. I think statistically the Celtics were actually pretty good in those gotta have it contexts.
Go watch how many Heat possessions had Butler throwing up garbage in close moments.