scoscox wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:scoscox wrote:
You don't think so? He's putting up 13 and 7 as a freshman and is a 7 footer who can run the floor and has a pretty smooth game. I could see it definitely happening before 4 years. Of course all centers are helped by having a good team around them, but all good teams don't have good centers.
REB BLK PTS
7.5 3.2 12.7
6.4 1.6 13.1
comp of Patrick Ewing vs. Justin Patton freshman year stats
Patton's a sophomore, right?
I hope you're not seriously comparing him with Patrick as a player.
Patton's a redshirt freshman so this is his first year of eligibility. I don't think you're appreciating how rare it is for a 7 footer to be able to do the things that Patton can do. Roy Hibbert was nowhere near the athlete or player Patton is and still has had a pretty long NBA career. Statistically pretty similar. Ewing was obviously a better shot blocker and rebounder marginally, but so far played about 4 more minutes and patton is shooting about 10% better from the field. I just did that comp for fun, but it's not really a big difference considering one is an NBA Hall of Famer. I've been very impressed by him so far.
XUFan09 wrote:scoscox wrote:Patton's a redshirt freshman so this is his first year of eligibility. I don't think you're appreciating how rare it is for a 7 footer to be able to do the things that Patton can do. Roy Hibbert was nowhere near the athlete or player Patton is and still has had a pretty long NBA career. Statistically pretty similar. Ewing was obviously a better shot blocker and rebounder marginally, but so far played about 4 more minutes and patton is shooting about 10% better from the field. I just did that comp for fun, but it's not really a big difference considering one is an NBA Hall of Famer. I've been very impressed by him so far.
I think the O/U on Patton leaving is 2.5, and I would cautiously take the under. In simplest terms, draft stock is a combination of performance and potential. My belief is that he will maximize this combination after his sophomore season. However, I am inclined to agree with Scoscox that leaving after this year is not out of the realm of possibility. He's producing at a good rate (extremely efficient on a moderate usage rate), doing a great job on the defensive glass and a respectable job on the offensive glass, and blocking shots at a good rate. This is all while being a highly mobile 7-footer who is only 20 and who scouts already know about. I'm still going with 2 years, but a one-and-done situation is definitely possible. At the very least, I bet he tests the waters.
Sidenote: To those calling Patton a sophomore in reference to basketball just because he practiced with the team for a year, that's just foolish. Practicing with a team while physically developing is worlds apart from actually playing Division I games. At best, he's only slightly ahead of most true freshman. If someone wants to insist on the distinction of "redshirt freshman," that makes sense, but he's definitely not a sophomore as a player, even if he is one as a student.
scoscox wrote:I'm only trying to point out that it is easily within the precedent of the NBA to take a chance on a guy of Patton's caliber or even far less than Patton's caliber. I think to dismiss it entirely is foolish.
The bar for one-and-done bigs has not been set high. Think Kosta Koufos, BJ Mullens, Daniel Orton. Those guys averaged 3, 8, and 3 points and 2, 6, and 2 boards respectively and were all drafted.
I think we can both agree it may be a mistake for him to leave, but I just wanted to make sure you weren't making the mistake of thinking the NBA's standards were too high to take a guy like Patton on potential alone.
scoscox wrote:I'm only trying to point out that it is easily within the precedent of the NBA to take a chance on a guy of Patton's caliber or even far less than Patton's caliber. I think to dismiss it entirely is foolish.
The bar for one-and-done bigs has not been set high. Think Kosta Koufos, BJ Mullens, Daniel Orton. Those guys averaged 3, 8, and 3 points and 2, 6, and 2 boards respectively and were all drafted.
I think we can both agree it may be a mistake for him to leave, but I just wanted to make sure you weren't making the mistake of thinking the NBA's standards were too high to take a guy like Patton on potential alone.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:scoscox wrote:I'm only trying to point out that it is easily within the precedent of the NBA to take a chance on a guy of Patton's caliber or even far less than Patton's caliber. I think to dismiss it entirely is foolish.
The bar for one-and-done bigs has not been set high. Think Kosta Koufos, BJ Mullens, Daniel Orton. Those guys averaged 3, 8, and 3 points and 2, 6, and 2 boards respectively and were all drafted.
I think we can both agree it may be a mistake for him to leave, but I just wanted to make sure you weren't making the mistake of thinking the NBA's standards were too high to take a guy like Patton on potential alone.
I think you are both right. There is NO WAY you can look at a stats comparison between these two. Patrick Ewing was a once in a generation of player who every NBA GM would pick #1 whatever year he came out. JP is an undeniable talent but at this point he would be taken with the hope that he continues to develop. There is no guarantee that he'll have a successful NBA career at this point. The thing is though that in today's NBA, players are drafted all the time based solely on potential. So IMO JP will have a very difficult decision to make after this year. I think some GM would be willing to take a chance on him in the first round, and a guaranteed contract is tough to pass up. I mean Diallo did nothing at Kansas last year and was still quickly drafted. That's what the NBA does.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:scoscox wrote:I'm only trying to point out that it is easily within the precedent of the NBA to take a chance on a guy of Patton's caliber or even far less than Patton's caliber. I think to dismiss it entirely is foolish.
The bar for one-and-done bigs has not been set high. Think Kosta Koufos, BJ Mullens, Daniel Orton. Those guys averaged 3, 8, and 3 points and 2, 6, and 2 boards respectively and were all drafted.
I think we can both agree it may be a mistake for him to leave, but I just wanted to make sure you weren't making the mistake of thinking the NBA's standards were too high to take a guy like Patton on potential alone.
I think you are both right. There is NO WAY you can look at a stats comparison between these two. Patrick Ewing was a once in a generation of player who every NBA GM would pick #1 whatever year he came out. JP is an undeniable talent but at this point he would be taken with the hope that he continues to develop. There is no guarantee that he'll have a successful NBA career at this point. The thing is though that in today's NBA, players are drafted all the time based solely on potential. So IMO JP will have a very difficult decision to make after this year. I think some GM would be willing to take a chance on him in the first round, and a guaranteed contract is tough to pass up. I mean Diallo did nothing at Kansas last year and was still quickly drafted. That's what the NBA does.
Bill Marsh wrote:No one called him a sophomore in reference to basketball. It's a simple fact that he's a college sophomore, not a freshman. The point was that it's foolish to compare a player who's 2 years out of high school with Patrick Ewing who was in his first year out of high school and hadn't even started playing the game until he got to HS. He was a soccer player growing up in Jamaica, not a basketball player. Compared with Patrick's maturation and level of experience, that year does mean a lot. But it's not just about experience. Patton was given the redshirt year year to build up his body by adding weight and strength. At that age, one extra year to develop physically makes a world of difference.
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