The Bill Simmons Podcast - Part 1: The Legacy Episode, the Next Kyrie, and White Boy Summer With Ryen Russillo
Episode Date: June 16, 2024In Part 1 of a two-part podcast, The Ringer's Bill Simmons is joined by Ryen Russillo to discuss the history of sports legacy "reassessments," NBA players who can change their legacies over the next f...ew seasons, Reed Sheppard NBA draft thoughts, and more. Host: Bill Simmons Guest: Ryen Russillo Producer: Kyle Crichton The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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So I'm excited to get to it. First, our're taping this.
It is 4.30 East Coast time, Game 5.
The NBA Finals is tomorrow night.
Ryan Rosillo is here.
Ryan, what do you think is the legacy of this podcast?
Well, it depends on if we're winning or we're losing.
What would the legacy of this episode ultimately be,
if you had to guess?
Who's the best player on this podcast?
Can we both be the best player,
or does one of us have to win?
I mean, more people would probably call me a Robin,
but I'd say I've also done it on my own.
You're like Jalen.
It's like you're a 1 a on this podcast and not,
not everyone maybe appreciates that.
Um,
I was on a Friday show with Termini and Eddie and I've never felt more like
Kyrie in my life.
Eddie,
Eddie was trying to,
to,
to start shit with me cause I gave him so much Phoenix Sun shit
the last couple of years.
And the Celts are up 3-0
and it seems like they're going to sweep,
which we'll get to in a second.
And Eddie's like,
but does this mean Jalen's the best player?
Who's the best player?
Is this going to screw you guys up?
And I knew what he was doing,
but I was also like,
I can't believe these are narratives that come.
Like if the Celtics swept,
that's one of the debates that's going to come out of this.
It's like, well, now what does this mean?
Is Jalen better than Jason?
You asked when we were texting about this, what was the first ever legacy reassessment?
That's going to be the first topic of the pod.
I thought that was a great idea by you.
I really put work in it, but what was your answer?
Did you put some thought?
What do you think it was?
Yeah, I actually put a lot of thought into this today.
Then there has to be a better version to find archived articles
there has to be something si si ball dying was a huge loss for all of us i would i would i i'd
really miss it it just sucks now the hardest video games online right now are reading an si article
or bleacher report where you're like, what the fuck is that?
Like, who's that guy?
Is that a level of like?
The Yahoo ones, a lot of that stuff
from the 2000s has gone too.
The ESPN Page Two stuff and a lot of the ESPN NBA stuff
is impossible.
Yeah, I'm with you.
So, to get back to the original point
of asking the question is,
like I love Wynne Horst, okay?
I love Wynne Horst and I think W i think winhorst when i think about people that
will say aggressive stuff about players the way he lit into luca after game three which was
pretty aggressive right but when you don't do it all the time and you have the credibility of
winhorst it'll always make me go like okay okay, whoa. And there's even things he said in his takedown of Luka
that I thought were totally accurate and fair,
but it was aggressive.
It's earned venom because he doesn't play the card really ever.
So when he does it, it catches your attention.
Yeah, like there's certain people on TV
where I'll just think, well, you do this with everything.
Yeah, this is Tuesday for you.
Yeah, you can't be an 11 on every single comment. So with Windhorse, like we said, if he's going to
say it, I think it should be consumed with, uh, just even if you disagree, disagreed a little
bit, but then I felt like it was kind of then turning into, well, you guys realize Luke is
the only reason they even have a whiff at guys realize luke is the only reason they even
have a whiff at this thing it's the only reason they're here oh oh oklahoma city is a good team
minnesota is a good team and for him to take those teams out and be the only really dependable guy
despite the defensive you know inabilities from him so then i was i was thinking about it was
texting with you i go we've been on a run of
this for a while like what was at stake for yannis what was at stake for uh joker like if joker
doesn't win the finals last year i don't know if he wins the mvp this year and there's this carryover
of like the constant assessment that we do with the players that i thought okay let me ask bill
because you're so good at the historic stuff.
When did this change? I think I have answers, but to go back to the Luca piece of this,
I had the same reaction you did because I agreed with 90% of what Windhorse said. I thought that
was just a terrible job by Luca to foul out and to kind of lose his composure in a must-win game. And there was that
play when he fell into the stands when he thought he should get the call and then he ran back and
then he was just hand-checking Pritchard until he got fouled, until he got fouled. It was the
fourth foul. And Doc and I talked about that on Wednesday and Doc said he was watching the game.
He's like, Luka's going to foul out of this game. He's so frustrated. He's actually going to foul
out now. So yeah, that's his fault. But I'm game. He's so frustrated. He's actually going to foul out now.
So yeah, that's his fault.
But I'm with you.
Like, you know, even you look at the Luca in the first half, Luca's last five first halves dating back to game five, Minnesota, 25 points, 10 for 16 game five, Minnesota
in this series, 17, seven and 14 shooting 23, nine for 14, 17, 7 for 16, 25 in game four, 10 for 18.
He's been pretty incredible for a lot of these Celtic games, even though I, yeah,
we talked about the defense has been bad. Some of the composure stuff has been bad,
but the reason this team fell down three, nothing you could see after he felled out when it was just Kyrie and the roll guys.
And it was like, wow, where's the offense coming from?
If they just shut down Kyrie, who else is even going to create a shot?
So yeah, I get it.
Luka's got to fix some stuff.
But I thought that two days of Luka bashing, it felt pretty harsh to me.
Not just the wind horse piece, but just that became the narrative.
And as a Celtic fan, I got worried because I was like, man, Luka's taking so much shit. I just feel like this is what
great players do. Now he's going to raise this game and 25 points in game four, he was the
dominant guy on the floor. But from a big picture legacy point, so there's two ways this could go.
We could go pre-internet or we can go post-internet
because I think there's an inflection point in the mid nineties where the internet's coming into
play and now you're getting message boards, you're getting early blog posts, you're getting
early ESPN and some other places, but you're also getting 24 hour talk radio and you're getting
the rise of ESPN.
PTI doesn't show up till the early 2000s,
but you're still getting local sports radio.
And just the infrastructure of sports 24-7
is starting to settle in,
which means it's probably Karl Malone in 97
when he wins the MVP and then sucks in the finals.
And then it becomes, well, Jordan took the lead back.
Well, what does this mean for Carl Malone?
Were we wrong all along?
And that was the first modern version of that.
I remember that was the first year
of my Boston Sports Guy column
writing like a piece killing Carl Malone.
And I'm sure whatever, if you were like Mike and the Mad Dog,
if you were whatever the EI whiner line was,
I'm sure it was just a Carl Malone pile session.
So I feel like that's the first. Does that sound right?
It does. I wrote it down because I went all the way back to Jerry West and was trying to find
different articles about how he was talked about. Because I was thinking about Jerry West,
obviously, this week with him passing and just his entire thing is incredible success wrapped in all of these
failures. I mean, just a tortured human being. An awful luck, the worst luck of any basketball
star. Just some of the worst things that could have happened to a career.
To lose to the Celtics six times in the finals, three times there's game sevens. The 69 one, the Celtics aren't even supposed to be there.
And you're just like, all these things happening in those series.
I just thought about Jerry West.
I was like, imagine if Jerry West existed today,
like what we would do to him.
Or on the flip side, how we would do the whole,
none of this is his fault, and you would just blame Will.
You would blame Elgin baylor you would blame
frank selby for missing the jumper in the 1962 finals it'd be everybody else's fault
yeah there's there's also that because whatever happens with the winning and losing like that's
the whole point okay why do we keep track of any of this stuff why do we spend all these hours
talking about these things well clearly the winning has to mean something, but I have, it is not
something that contradicts itself. I have players that I think have not won for different circumstances.
And I think there are other players who have not won and it has everything to do with who they are
as a player. And yet it's now baked down. Like, I think people will become really simple whenever
this stuff happens. It's like, oh, you won. Okay, cool. You're all these things. It's like, oh,
you lost. All right. Then you're all these things. And you can't ever be any of those other things
until we update this. And now we're just updating it constantly. So if you go to Carl Malone,
I just wanted to just touch on the Jerry West part of it. And then I think there's a lot of
our dads out there that would go, Wilt was incredible, but he was also a loser. Okay?
There was a lot of that stuff that I just couldn't fathom, but he was also a loser. Okay?
There was a lot of that stuff that I just couldn't fathom.
I didn't watch the games.
But in the 69 finals, Wilt has three games where he scores four, eight, and eight.
He didn't play the last six minutes of game seven or the last five.
He had this injury, and then his coach benched him.
Right.
In game seven with five minutes left.
And Russell was so mad that Wilt didn't come back in that they had a falling out.
He was like, how dare you rob me of my final game
where we were supposed to go head to head
and you're sitting on the bench
because you made your coach mad.
You're right.
Wilt's the first legacy guy because he wins in 67
and they have one of the best years ever.
And they're like 68 and 13. They roll through the
playoffs. They beat Russell Celtics. And it's like, Wilt has arrived. Here it is. He's finally
figured it out. And then the next year was that year he tried to lead the league in assists
and was like so unselfish. It was like actually like a disaster. He was just like passing up
five foot jump hooks to try to kick it back out. And then all the loser stuff started again. But then in 72 with Wes, they went 33 straight,
they win the title. So he kind of shook it off. I just think there's a bunch of New England people
walking around, around our age that are nodding their heads specific to the New England thing
because of the Celtics where there's just a lot of guys going, yeah, I had that same speech. My dad gave me the same speech that Will was a loser.
Right. Because Will is, I think history has actually been really kind to him in that with
more information, maybe the impact of that information gets lost. But as a kid, you were
like, what did he do? Like, wait, he was like this mythological creature you're like what yeah how how did he
well how did he score that many like what happened and then if especially if you're from new england
the dads would say he was awesome but russell owned him well but that that was one of my i
think that was my single favorite chapter when i wrote my book about will versus russell all the
stuff digging up the anecdotes from that era where some of the best players of that era were like,
Will was a loser.
I wouldn't want to play with Will.
Will didn't want the ball in crunch time
because they were way more candid back then.
We didn't know there was an internet and a screenshot Twitter era.
I'll tell you the first modern version of this,
even though it was way pre-internet,
but it was Dr. J
because Dr. J wins the titles in the ABA. He comes to Philly. They're up two nothing in the 77
finals. Then Walton comes back and they beat him. And then they don't make the finals in 78 or 79.
They make it in 80. Magic beats them. They lose in 81. They make the finals in 82. They beat the Celtics in a game seven
in Boston. The Lakers freaking wax them. Right. And at that point it was like, well, Dr. J,
I mean, he won those in the ABA, but not here. And you could go back and read the Sports Illustrated
articles. And there was a few of them that I remember leaning on when I was doing my book
and just the disappointment that Dr. J wasn't
more impactful and better, especially in the late seventies. It was like, was it where we
sold a false bill of goods? He was awesome in his first season in 77, a bunch of highlights,
his knees were bothering him, but then he won the title in 83 and it stopped.
And then it just flipped to magic because magic had the 84 finals when he sucked in game two,
he sucked in game four, he sucked in game four,
he choked in a bunch of different ways. And that was the Tragic Johnson thing, which has been
written and talked about a million times. And then of course he shed that and in 85 they win.
So it feels like Doc Magic right around there, but the current infrastructure
starts with Karl Malone and then Shaq in 2000.
It's like Shaq, same thing.
Shaq's a loser.
Shaq's the new Wilt.
Shaq's never going to win.
And then he rips through everybody,
wins the 2000 title.
It's like, all right, enough with that narrative.
And then Kobe in 2009 was the other one from that decade.
It's like Kobe can never win without Shaq.
He's selfish.
It's all about him.
It's one-on-one basketball.
Can't win that way. It's a bad teammate. It's one-on-one basketball. Can't win that way.
He's a bad teammate.
And then guess what?
He won the title.
There goes that narrative.
I don't remember the 70s, obviously.
The 80s part of it, the Dr. J one is good, but I only understood it after the fact.
And they get Moses.
That's one of the greatest teams of my lifetime that's just lost in the shadow of all the Celtics Lakers stuff but I also think the Celtics and Lakers were so dominant and I think
this plays into the 90s a little bit where I wasn't freaked out about Terry Cummings legacy
I wasn't sitting around going man this Alex English you know what I was wrong with Adrian
Dantley I just I didn't care And maybe that happened with Houston a little bit
because the Twin Towers, the 86 finals,
taking out the Lakers, losing to the Celtics,
and then it took Hakeem almost another decade.
But you were always losing, for the most part,
you were losing the Lakers and Celtics.
And I think from a player standpoint,
that's where, when I look back and read some of the stuff
with Barkley in 93 like that one
was devastating to me just because I was a huge Barkley fan but you were losing to Jordan like I
don't remember and Barkley was awesome in that series that was everyone blamed Kevin Johnson
because he sucked so bad in that finals that it just all the venom went toward him Barkley was
really good in that finals I thought but we did because Jordan was scoring so much.
I mean, people, it's very easy to forget this,
but that was like the first thing.
And I also think regionally,
the Celtics thing probably messes up my perspective
just growing up around it.
But it was like, oh yeah, this guy,
cool dunks, cool sneakers.
You know, he's a loser though.
All he does is score a million points
and he can't win.
And it took him a really long time
when you look at his career. But then when everybody else is losing to him, I don't remember
after the 96 finals being like, oh, Kemp and Gary Payton are losers. I just don't remember any of
that stuff. So I think the Karl Malone part of it, because of the MVPs, that might have been the
beginning of... I like the way you framed that. Like of today's structure, that was the,
maybe the foundation for it.
Cause it definitely got worse.
Cause the Shaq stuff was real because when he had the quote where he said,
I'd wanted every level except for college and the pros people were so like,
are you,
imagine somebody saying that.
Imagine a post to remember that was like,
well,
he doesn't care about free throws.
Obviously it doesn't care about winning.
Can't make free throws.
There's another one. Cause I was thinking about some of the pieces I wrote. And LeBron became the
first entire career legacy guy when he got drafted out of high school and was being hyped up. And
there was a backlash that we hadn't even seen him play. And then somehow during his rookie year,
as we watched him, like, oh, this guy might have it. And then it just became a constant debate about how good he was. Then we were disappointed. Then he beats, makes
the 2007 finals, beats the Pistons in that game five. It's like, here we go. LeBron's arrived.
Then he had the two disappointing 09, 10 playoffs in Cleveland. 09 wasn't his fault. 10 was.
And then the 2011 finals. and i was thinking the 2011 finals
were the first double team legacy one like the way you were laying it out because we had on the
one hand lebron oh man he doesn't have it oh this big three this whole situation this is now going
to be a legendary disaster potentially but then dirk on flip side, who we had kind of given up on after the
06 finals and then the way he wins the 07 MVP and Golden State beats him in round one, it was just
so embarrassing for him. And then he kind of moves into this 25 a game, don't take him seriously as
a champ, all-star, kind of good stats, ultimately kind of kind of hollow and then an 11 has one of the great
runs in the history of the playoffs and just checks off checks off durant checks off kobe
uh checks off lebron and wade in the finals after they talk shit and the finals ends and it became
a john oway broncos thing so we were talking about that legacy but then there was also the
lebron legacy so i i feel like that's like officially cemented
because now we have first take
starting right around then. I think first take exists.
PTI exists. All the
internet stuff is in full form.
All the Reddit stuff is
in full form and now we're off.
Now it's legacy time.
Dirk got destroyed during that
stretch. So they blow the lead
in 06 and then he wins MVP.
The Mavs come back stronger, we think, 67-15.
And then they lose the Warriors as a 1-8 seed,
and he was getting torched.
But remember, he got the MVP after he had been eliminated.
Right.
Which was the most awkward.
It was something where you're like, when did it really get nasty?
Plenty of these guys, as we've just alluded to going over this history, have gotten destroyed by the media.
But the Dirk one was a special case because then you could throw in, it's like,
oh, he's just kind of one of those big soft heroes.
Soft foreign guy, yeah.
On top of everything else. And people were
really
pissed at them, almost.
Not because they cared.
What was that, 0-2, 0-3 playoffs? One of those
two where he got hurt and they shelved
him. He could have played, but they didn't want to risk
his career. I think it was 03. And then Cuban, and it was a whole debate and he could
have played. And so it kind of started there. And then in 06, when they blew the lead and then 07,
by the time 07 was done, people were like, Dirk soft, can't win with Dirk. Meanwhile, the guy,
what he did in 2011 was about as impressive. It's funny.
This would be a fun list.
Guys who took too much shit.
And then the alternate side of guys who maybe in retrospect didn't get enough shit.
Like, I'm not sure Carmelo got enough shit.
Carmelo, for Carmelo to be number one.
Because I think now that there's this sense and Carmelo's a good guy.
Everybody likes him.
He had a really good career.
He's a Hall of Famer.
But if you go back, it's like, ah, it's kind of disappointing too.
Like they were 2-2 Denver Lakers 2009, right?
It's the best two out of three against Kobe,
who had had his knee drained earlier in that series.
And it's like, that was a moment for Carmelo potentially to,
you win two out of three against the Lakers,
you win the title because you're playing Orlando.
And that's the closest he ever got.
And then the way he forced the trade to the Knicks,
that's a good example of somebody
that I think the post-career stuff
is a little friendlier than maybe it could have been.
Melo's a really good one.
I used to defend Melo, though.
If you go through all of the playoff series losses,
you go, all right, welloff series losses you go all right well
how many times was he losing to a team that he shouldn't lose to like I think that's like the
telltale sign for a lot of these players that are all NBA caliber guys guys in the MVP conversations
the clear ones of some of these teams where there's just ones where I go I know you're you're
thought of as a one and you're a one, however we define it, but it's
not a winning one.
And I think Melo probably had some of those basketball traits.
But when you go back and look at all the playoff losses that he had, rarely are you looking
at teams where you'd say, oh, how did he lose to that team?
Like the team was either always better than him or they were within a few games having
the same record when they actually matched up in the playoffs.
But Melo's a good one in there.
But I like how you kind of referenced the full circle thing with Dirk
because it wasn't just even about winning after you lost.
It was winning against what became everyone's least favorite team
outside of Heat fans.
There was no neutrality with the Miami Heat,
especially in that first year.
I had friends that were pretty passive NBA fans
that were like, I want nothing to do with
that league. They were just personally offended by LeBron going down there with Bosh, which again,
those guys got way too much shit historically. I would say when you look back on it, I think
there's probably a lot of people. There's no question. I was way too mad about that. That
wasn't that big of a deal was the fact that Dirk does, right? Mr. Euro, Mr. Soft, cool stats, bro.
Lose to the Warriors, which were such a fun team too.
So like anybody that had been neutral with that series is going,
oh my God, this Warriors team's awesome.
This is so much fun.
Like I want them to beat the Mavs.
And the Mavs were really getting just torched in that two-year window.
And of course, a big part of it was Dirk.
And I think it always kind of acts like a question that I don't know that can be answered
is how different was Dirk?
Like how different was he actually in 07 and 2011?
I think the scars from 06 and 07 actually helped him
because he's talked about it since.
Like sometimes when you get your teeth kicked in,
it makes you a little,
I feel the same way about this 24 Celtics team.
Like some of the stuff that happened to them over the last eight years, I think becomes helpful when you hit that mental toughness point, like what they had in game three, where
they're blowing this lead in real time.
It feels like this huge collapse coming and they kind of gathered their breath a little
bit.
I don't know if they would have been able to do that two years ago.
I mentioned Carmelo.
It's funny.
I was always a big Carmelo defender when he played.
I was looking up as you were talking.
I wrote a column in July, 2014.
And the headline was no escape from New York with Carmelo Anthony staying with the Knicks.
Will we ever find out how truly great he can be?
Because my whole thing was like, I think Carmelo can be the best guy on a championship team.
And he never really had the right situation.
The other guy who I thought was remembered
a little unfairly, and I wrote about him too,
was T-Mac.
Because I thought, I had T-Mac in like my top 75.
I thought he was great, but it was the same thing
where it was like, well, he blew a 3-1 lead in round one
and he never got out of this.
And he's never, you know, never played in the finals.
And then you just kind of get pigeonholed in that spot.
And you're right.
Like the key point is circumstances can sometimes play a lot of this. never played in the finals, and then you just kind of get pigeonholed in that spot. And you're right.
The key point is circumstances can sometimes play a lot of this.
I know TMAC was good. Of course it does.
TMAC in the middle of 2000s was right there with Wade and Kobe, and he just was.
To me, those three are pretty even for about five, six years there.
But I don't think we're ever looking at TM-Mac as a loser because one, his style of play was so much fun
and we didn't look at him as this absurd,
even though their usage rates, I'm sure,
are really high in some of those seasons,
but we knew he was more of a playmaker.
It didn't feel like he was just going to do
whatever he wanted to do whenever he felt like it
and wasn't really looking at the game
through the lens of somebody just being like,
how do I make everybody better around me?
So I think there's just a lot of stuff
with T-Mac aesthetically that we all loved.
Like even if you weren't a fan of the Magic.
Yeah, so I think there's more sympathy for him.
But look, my guy Chris Paul,
it's not going to happen, right?
It's not going to happen with him being...
Don't rule it out.
If the Warriors wave him before July 28th,
there could be a little grab on to a contender.
There's a certain stage where past a certain number of years
in who you are as a player,
I actually thought he was pretty good for the Warriors,
but he's not going to be playing the same kind of role he was playing with the 21 Phoenix Suns or potentially the 22 Phoenix Suns.
Like that probably isn't happening again.
So when I think back to...
It was 40.
Barkley, yeah, right.
Barkley gets shit on because he's still on TNT.
And those guys bring it up.
Right.
But then when Jordan said that to Pippen about,
I should have never gone to Houston and played with your sorry ass
because you're a loser, you know, I'm paraphrasing,
but Pippen sharing that, that Jordan thought that of Barkley.
But the 90s really felt like it was more of, well, they lost to Jordan.
So what are you supposed to do with that?
I don't think we got on these guys' cases as much as we do now
or how willing we are to just rewrite all of it
based on the outcome of some series
when the player might not be any different.
So we might have a new wave of when these guys age out,
when Westbrook, when Harden are done.
That might be the group of guys
where there's just not really going to be any kind of sympathy whatsoever
despite the accolades and the Hall of Fame resumes.
So I wonder if we're actually starting to graduate the first generation of this group of players of the last 20 years, where when they're retired...
I would say it's a 2.0 generation.
I think the Dirk Kobe generation was the first generation.
Okay, All right. I think this is, I think you're right that this,
this Harden,
Westbrook,
Durant,
all these guys,
this is definitely a generation,
but I think it's like the,
kind of the second generation.
That really does feel like Dirk Kobe.
That era was in there.
We're going to,
we're going to actually take a break and then come back and talk about guys who we think could flip their
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All right, so Rosillo, you texted me and you asked,
which guys can flip their legacy next couple years, a.k.a. Kyrie?
Because I do think win or lose with this finals, Kyrie has at least reestablished himself as a wiser, better
version of himself that I don't think he's as good as he was in 16 or 17, but is somebody that can be
one of the best players on a team that can play in the finals because we're watching it. And that's
something I think you and I would have thought a year ago was inconceivable. So if you had to make a list of who's the next Kyrie,
who's the next person for this to have this happen to,
who would be your number one pick?
Probably Bryson DeChambeau.
Right.
As we're taping this, he's winning US Open.
And the crowd's rooting for him.
But this is exactly what's going to happen.
If he wins a major this whole week in the
golf world they'd be like ah he wasn't that annoying yeah it wasn't really that bad he just
you know he was misunderstood right people couldn't stand him people couldn't stand him for
years and they're gonna all tell us why it was actually just kind of like misleading and that's
not really who he was and his approach was he was trying to
hack golf and he learned from that he has the scars i believe in all the scar stuff uh
the next kairi the kairi one is i'm sure you would
concede it's pretty unique different yeah we're not going to have another kairi situation it's It's unique. Does it matter for Durant?
I had him down.
I had six guys down.
He wasn't my first choice.
I thought I had Dame as the number one.
Dame's a great one.
Because I don't want to just name,
I just don't want to name like all the good players
that don't have rings.
No,
it feels like there has to be more to it.
Right.
Yeah.
So doc was on my pod on Wednesday saying how Dame was out of shape this year.
I was actually surprised that he mentioned to it,
said he was a little out of shape because he was,
he knew he was going to get traded and he was so afraid to work out that it
ended up fucking up his whole season.
So if you're thinking about this next season with the Bucs,
where Giannis, I'm sure, is going to be a man on a mission because he just has had bad luck with injuries now two years in a row. Dame in the greatest shape of his life. Dame not playing the
Olympics, which is good. And then if you're just talking about Eye of the Tiger, the Bucs have to
be number one in the Eastern Conference if the Celtics actually win the title. Who is going to actually care the most about this season for a variety of reasons?
And then if Dame can reestablish himself as this awesome offensive player again,
which I think he was pretty up and down, I think we would both agree, and then be kind of the Kyrie
sidekick with Giannis as the Luca,
you know,
then that's, it's a different territory.
You know,
it could also go the other way where it,
that doesn't happen.
And you end up in that Carmelo mid 2010s run where it's like,
Oh,
I guess this isn't going to happen.
And then all of a sudden you start bouncing around the league.
So I do feel like there's a fork in the road potential with him.
I like that one a lot.
I really like how Doc talked about Giannis' playmaking,
which I completely agree with.
And I think that's why Giannis gives you a chance
in a way where maybe somebody else is putting up huge numbers.
You'd be like, okay, but is he willing to get the other people involved?
And I couldn't quite figure out,
like it felt like Giannis was kind of leading the charge
for them to get Adrian Griffin.
And then it was the other guys
that were anti-Adrian Griffin.
And then finally, like Giannis kind of came along.
And I was wondering, this is a different topic,
but is Giannis' ring the most important ring
for an individual player of the last five years?
The most important legacy ring?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what?
I actually think it's Curry in 2022.
I think as the years pass,
let's say they don't win in 2022.
They just,
let's say they lose to Memphis in round two
and it's just, they never get back.
And then Curry gets in this weird situation
where he's one of the most influential players of all time.
He's the greatest shooter of all time.
But he also becomes a little bit of a yeah, but guy
where it's like 2015 finals, couldn't win the MVP.
16, couldn't get done.
17, 18, needed KD.
Yeah, but. and then the 22
just took it off the table
and that was that
now he's one of the best
12 players of all time
Giannis
I still feel like
can get
like I don't know
I don't know if that was
his last chance
I guess is my point
for Curry it was
yeah it's definitely not
Giannis' last chance
I mean I
voted Giannis
because he could go to the Knicks
like there's yeah he could go to the Knicks.
Yeah, he could go to... Who knows?
Who knows where he's playing three years from now?
But I guarantee he's going to be impactful.
I just feel like there's more swings at the pinata for him.
Sometimes with Giannis, I feel like he's actually underrated,
which I know probably sounds stupid.
Yeah, I think you're...
Can I give you another one?
Do the Durant. Lay out the Durant case if it's
so Brooklyn with Kyrie disaster
extension fire everybody
okay never mind
no actually trade me but only trade me to this
team and Phoenix doesn't make
and I'm not even talking about a ring bill I'm talking
about like just a competitive Western Conference
finals where we're not sure of the outcome
and even if the Suns were to lose, just a
hell of a lot better than what we saw with Minnesota just
taking them out back.
I don't
know that you're ever going to see somebody as great
as Durant have two rings where
you want to use a yeah, but example.
He's going to
be out of all the guys in the top 20 with rings.
He'll be the biggest.
Yeah, but he will.
I don't know.
As you know, I'm probably his biggest fan.
Um, it'll be, yeah, but you joined a 73 win team and you won two titles.
And that's the only reason you want.
That's it.
That's what he's going to get.
And he's going to say he doesn't care,
but I think he does.
I have another.
This is a great one.
It's a zag.
Jaw.
It's young.
You don't think of it, right?
It's like, but there's jaw.
It's just a lot of,
I kind of forgot about Ja.
Everyone's forgotten about Ja.
They're just kind of over here on the side.
But if you look at their summer and their roster and their pieces,
combined with the fact that they have the ninth pick,
and hopefully he comes back with his head on straight.
I don't know.
They're left out of that Western conversation.
I don't know if I would leave them out because there's no reason he can't at least imitate Edwards from an offensive
statistics standpoint. He's not going to imitate the defense part, but could he match? Could he
be basically Edwards for Memphis? Yeah, I think he could. So, and this is somebody that I think it could. So, and this is somebody that I think we're all disappointed in and worried that it's going to keep going sideways and maybe it just flips and goes the other way.
That's a great one.
Thank you.
I don't even feel like you had a good of it.
The, uh, the zag.
Well, cause he's young.
You don't think of it like legacy young guys yet, but you know, he's headed toward, you start rattling off the disappointing superstars
who their career got fucked up in some way,
and he's in pencil on that list unless he flips it.
He gives you so much fun.
Yeah.
And in the beginning,
and then you think about the record they had
before everybody got hurt a couple years ago,
and you're going man are they like
that's what the what the timberwolves just did is what this memphis story was supposed to be
this playoff moment where they announced to the nba world okay like we're a real factor here you
got to always be thinking about memphis and how you match up with us and then of course just when
it gets into like the favorite the guys that you just love watching play basketball.
Although I'll tell you,
I'm going to worry about him the rest of his career
the way he lands.
Well, yeah. We've been talking about
that for, what, four years?
He's our number one oh-no
guy other than Porzingis.
Yeah. But then you add in the other part and you're
just thinking,
this guy's deal is, what's his deal?
For the longest time.
So he doesn't feel like the face of a franchise
in the last couple seasons.
It's up to him to kind of turn that around.
But that's a good one.
Do you have one? Because I have another one.
Well, I just have the aged out group that we've already talked about. All right Because I have another one. Well, I just have the aged out group
that we've already talked about.
All right, I have two more.
I think we covered it.
Is Levine good enough for the conversation?
No.
Okay.
How about Paul George?
Yeah, of course he is.
So I really like Paul George,
and he was actually my number one guy on my list after Dame, because... Yeah, of trade piece slash.
Can we get this guy piece for a couple of years, which we're about to talk about in the retradables
has that weird OKC year. And then instead of going to the Lakers goes to the Clippers
and becomes kind of Kawhi's Jalen Brown. But then when Kawhi got hurt that one year,
what was that, 22?
And all of a sudden, Paul George looked like
he could be a 1A and be the best guy
on a finals team potentially
and almost got it done.
And now he's kind of floated into that zone.
What did you call him?
A coin toss guy?
Yeah, I called him hard
in the coin toss brothers in the playoffs.
It's amazing.
One of your best nicknames of all time, the coin toss brothers.
So the question for me is this, Paul George, I think is heading into his, it would be his
15th season, this next one where he's going to get one last big contract.
And is that just who he is?
Is he a coin toss brother?
Or what if he went to Philadelphia and played with Embiid and Maxie?
Or what if he went into Orlando and became the lead
guy with Palo or, you know, wherever, what if the Lakers and Clippers flip him and he becomes a
Laker and LeBron goes to the Clippers? Like whatever scenario you want to give, it seems
like he's going to be in a more interesting spot next year than this year, I guess is my point.
Because wherever he is on the Clippers, he's the number three star on the movie poster
now because Kawhi sucks up all the oxygen and then Harden, once he got there, he sucked up a
lot of the oxygen. And it's like, oh yeah, and we also have Paul George. And I think he's better
than that. I voted for him for all NBA last year too, I should mention. I was looking at this
because I know we're going to talk sixers
and options and all that stuff but i'm glad you brought up um the 22 playoff run because
he was like 30 a game right yeah excuse me the 21 playoff run 21 that's what it was because it
was still a little covid hangover. Right.
I thought that series against Utah,
a really good regular season team in Utah, I just
thought it was important.
That Dallas series, that Utah series,
and then he still put up big numbers
against the Suns,
which ended up going six games.
And he used to be somebody that was almost laughably
underperforming in the playoffs.
Which made the playoff P nickname so funny.
Yeah.
And then there was the game, I forget,
was it a playoff game against Cleveland where he,
either they were in the Gatorade commercial
where he hits this game winner in the Gatorade commercial,
then he came back in the real game out of commercial and missed it,
or it was the other way around.
And then when you look at the Oklahoma City losses
in the two years that he was there at 18 and 19,
the game that I just was like,
how do you score 34 points in game five
and five points in game six.
Like how did the Thunder lose to the Jazz that year?
Like that is a, that series means a lot to me when I think about Westbrook.
And then at that time with George.
So I think the 21 run that George was on was really important, at least for him.
And that's kind of the, maybe we're too deep in the weeds with it,
but I think that's why the playoffs can be so important to beyond just who
wins the whole thing or who loses in the finals and who's all time great.
And then who sucks and who's disappointing is going to be labeled all these
things the rest of their lives.
But for George,
just to have that moment because at that point the standard had been so low
set by him of like, what is this guy?
And after Dame hits that shot,
he's like, it's still a bad shot.
And you're just not allowed to say it,
even if it was right.
You're just like, what the hell are you thinking about
when you're out there,
when you're in this incredibly talented guy?
So I don't know if the ring part of it mentions,
but I'd say the second part of his playoff thing here
has been just far better than,
maybe I should say the third part, because I think the early indie chapters were actually pretty good for him when no one really expected that team to beat the Heat anyway. Paul George in those nine games was 30, 11 rebounds, 5.4 assists,
playing 41 minutes a game.
I mean, he looked like one of the five, six best guys in the league.
So the question, like I think about the Philly fit for him,
which I'm not sure I'm buying it.
As I talked about in previous pods,
I don't buy that a guy who grew up in California
who wanted for years to get back to California, who's in California is suddenly going to be like, you know, it sounds
awesome Philly for great things about their fans in the East coast. Maybe I'll try it. I just,
I'm dubious, but I also think from a basketball standpoint, it would be an amazing move
to play with Maxine and Embiid. Now you're in the same situation with Embiid as you are with Kawhi,
where you just have your fingers crossed every week that the
guy's going to be in the court.
But they need
somebody like him.
And in the East, which I think is
wide open with the exception of Boston and whatever
we see from Milwaukee.
It's possible. One more legacy guy
really quick.
There's a LeBron ring chase piece that I don't think he'll do,
but it would be interesting if he did it.
Cause he's still good enough that it wouldn't feel like a Gary Payton on the
2006 heat type of thing.
Right.
He could go to Dallas and be the third best guy on the team.
Maybe even second,
depending on where he is physically at age 40,
but he could go to Philly and play with
Embiid and Maxie. There's teams you could put him on where it's not 2006 Gary Payton. I just don't
think he'll do it. But the question for me is, is he just done chasing rings or not? Because he has
no chance when he won with the Lakers, I don't think. It would be funny because it would be his fifth and also would be the least impactful
ring perhaps in NBA history for a star to have his legacy changed at all because nobody's changing
their mind on him at this point right there's too much data I've seen it all no there's one
scenario if he went to Dallas and played with Luka and Kyrie and then Luka got hurt in the first round
and LeBron's like,
I guess I'm going to have to dip back
into the way back machine
and then won the title anyway.
It would have to be on a team where the star got hurt
and he had to throw it around his back.
That would be the scenario.
All right.
I agree with that.
I did not think...
I still think people would be like,
well, yeah, but Luka did all the regular season work and got him to seed
LeBron in his 20 games.
Yeah, they would. I mean, those guys would just
find a way to dump on him anyway. All right.
Where's Embiid in all this?
You know what's funny?
I considered him briefly
and I just feel like I've given up.
You've given up?
I think I have. I think I've given up. You've given up? I think I have.
I think I've given up.
He can win me back.
What does that mean?
What does that mean?
I just don't think he gets it.
Like even seeing him on that halftime show
or whatever, the pregame show, the clips,
I'm just like, oh man.
Like you haven't come through
in one playoff series
in your entire career.
And I don't even think you realize that.
Right?
Does he realize that?
You're 30.
Where he and Ben Simmons are actually perfect teammates, for lack
of realization.
Like, at some point, it might be you.
You know?
How many excuses can we have
of, I really like Embiid, i i'd still go back to that week
when he dropped the 70 on 19 year old wimby yama and then missed the denver game and i'm just like
does this guy get it i don't know i just don't know you're laughing well i can't believe you
said you've given up even though i did something similar when
i want i went on part of my take and we were just kind of like it was a conversation that somehow
started with like the tatum windows of possibilities right yeah if tatum wins the finals mvp which
even if the celtics win this thing i don't know he would have to do some the series would have to go
longer he would have to have some huge huge games so. So it's not, I'm not completely ruling
it out, but as of today, you wouldn't feel great about Tatum's chances of finals MVP.
And so what the high side of that conversation could be, right? Some of the, Hey, is he actually,
is Luca actually better than this guy? And it's like, yeah, Luca is better than him. Okay. I
don't even care about what happens in the finals like it's ridiculous to me um then on
the low side if dallas sort of win the whole thing or what if they blew a three lead or something
like that like what would happen this celtics group i have to ask you some of those questions
a little bit later in the pod but then it became like okay well who are the top four and that's
when zach low that clip had gone around of him saying like the top four irrefutable and my point was like until
further notice i don't like mb is just not waved into that group for me anymore he just isn't it
doesn't mean i don't think he's like outside of top 10 or something absurd like that of course not
but i'm just i'm not going to like blindly think of him in the same category that I think of the other top shot creator,
massive stack guys, MVP conversation guys. So I don't know if we're saying the same thing.
You know why you thought that? Because he's not reliable. He hasn't proven that he can be
reliable season to season. He just hasn't. And now he's going to be 30. And I'm looking at the
history of big dudes and what happens when you just start adding
weight every year, just because you're getting older and that's what happens.
I don't think he's a reliable bet from a health standpoint.
And I don't know if he gets it.
And when I say get it, I mean, hey, Embiid, like you got to be in awesome shape, right?
The more weight you carry, the more bad things can happen and you can blame whoever,
but it ultimately starts with that. I think he obviously works on his game,
his offensive game. I think both of us were like, wow, this guy, this is the best shooting big man
we've ever had. He's an incredible free throw shooter, a lot of things to like, but at this
point, and the reason I put him on is I'd be really surprised if you flip that
narrative. I haven't seen him.
And maybe he has, and I've missed it,
but have you seen like real reflection with him? Like,
what am I doing wrong? Maybe I could have,
maybe going into next year, I have to do this, this, and this.
I just haven't heard it.
You hear stuff like you see him on the ESPN show
where he's talking about the Celtics got lucky
this year because I got hurt.
So you get hurt every year.
That was a tough look.
Now, were they actually debating
are the Celtics a dynasty
before they even won the finals?
That was stupid in itself.
I'm just wondering.
The dumbest thing I've ever seen seen as somebody who's worked in television you gotta win a title before we
can have the dynasty combo just win okay but first one when the first one was indeed on the
desk just so rattled from how terrible that segment producing was maybe that that's why
like i'm coming up with an excuse for him
because maybe he was, he didn't realize,
like he saw the tape after,
he goes, I shouldn't have said that the Celtics were lucky
when I was hurt again.
He's like, but God, who,
why did we start the Bs with the Celtics of Dynasty
before they've even won this first one?
I did a ringer.
I did a ringer top hundred.
We had the last vote.
And I think I had Embiid ninth.
And I wanted to put him higher
and I just couldn't justify it.
Okay, give me the eight in front of him.
I had Jokic,
Doncic,
Giannis,
Shea,
Tatum.
I had Brunson sixth.
I'm not going to apologize either.
Curry seven. You shouldn't. Just an aside on Brunson sixth. I'm not going to apologize either. Curry seventh. You shouldn't. Just an
aside on Brunson. I've been prepping now
for the last week, just cramming
for the NBA draft and
watching these small point guards
and go, well, that's really cool,
but I don't know. Or, alright,
that's amazing you did that, but
I don't really like the way you're finishing around the
rim here, and I'm not sure
this is going to work or whatever. And then every time
all I do is think about Jalen Brunson
and what he did this year.
He has to be sixth. Curry seventh.
Didn't make the playoffs. Like, sorry.
Edwards eight.
That was the toughest
one, that Edwards-Curry-Brunson thing. And then
I had Embiid nine. Guess who I had?
Number 10.
Durant.
Victor Wimbledyama.
I'm just ready.
I'm just,
I'm never making a list like that again and not having him in the top 10.
I'm just not.
NBA.com should do this where they have all the MVP voters vote for like the top 10 players once a month.
Well, that's kind of what we were trying to do with the ringer top 100.
But what you just said, though, is what they should do with the MVP to make it stand out from all NBA.
We should vote for 10 places.
There should be like he finished ninth in the MVP voting should be a thing we say.
I don't know why we cut it because historically at five i like that because this is something that you've brought up and you brought
it up in your book and this is why this stuff matters is you go back and like i was looking
at charles barkley and i was trying to find these articles from 93 like how yeah off the top of the
pot like how are people talking about him and then i go my god like he had eight top six MVP finishes. Right. And it would be kind of
cool if we had 10 slots for the MVP vote, just so you could see like historically where guys
lined up. Cause then when you go through Karl Malone's resume, cause I started looking at
like Barkley's MVP year against Jordan, then also the Karl Malone years and like how many years he
finished really high in the MVP voting. And granted, you can end
up finishing lower because of just the points and the way the voting works or everything.
But if there was like an end of year definitive top 10 list based on the MVP voting, it'd be a
great resource to just kind of go back and think of like, this is where this guy lived for this
many years of his career, as opposed to like a peak two or three year season career.
Larry Bird is the best version of that
because he's like, it's like three.
Shocking, shocking submission.
No, he's, I think top three for 10 years
of the first 10 years of the league.
Is he really?
It's like, no, it's like three, two, three, two, one, one, one, two, three. I forget what it is, but yeah. 3-2-3-2-1-1-1-2-3.
I forget what it is, but yeah.
All right, I have it here.
4-2-2-2-1-1-1-3-2.
Yeah.
This is his first nine years of the week.
Like, that's crazy.
Nobody's going to do that again.
Hey, we have a Retratable
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I didn't prep you for this.
We are doing Paul George's trade in 2017
from Indianapolis to Oklahoma City.
Indianapolis acquired Dmanis Sabonis and Victor Oladipo.
And if you go back and read the pieces from the time, Oladipo was like four years, 84 million. And people were like, ah, it's a little
pricey. And then he went there and had a couple of good years. They get Sabonis. They turned him
into eventually into Halliburton. It turns out to be a good trade for them. Not a good trade if you
go back and read what happened. But the reason I bring this up, not just because we had Paul George in the legacy thing, but there's some relevance to
Boston and Dallas in this whole thing, Rosillo.
One was the Celtics, if you remember, tried to get Paul George twice.
They tried to get him at the 2017 trade deadline.
And if you go back and read this, it's all true.
They offered the Brooklyn pick swap pick as part of the package
to try to get Paul George in February 2017.
The pick that became Jason Tatum.
Indiana shut it down.
Then during the summer there,
they offered Crowder, Marcus Smart, and three firsts.
Not the Brooklyn 2018 first or the Sacramento first for Paul George.
Indiana said no.
Indiana took that Oladipo-Cebonis deal, and Boston was furious because they were like,
we had a better deal.
In retrospect, not a better deal, right?
Three picks in their top 20s,
Crowder and Smart versus Sabonis and Oladipo. So everybody shit on Pritchard for that, including me.
The other piece that's interesting for the finals, Jackie McMullen in 2018 wrote this. You can Google it. It was on ESPN. She wrote a big giant feature about Kyrie that's really interesting. And in
there, she said one of the reasons Kyrie fell out there is because the Cavs explored a three-way deal with Phoenix and
Indiana that would have shipped Irving and Fry to the Suns. This is summer 2017 and brought Eric
Bledsoe and Paul George to Cleveland. If you remember Bledsoe was a clutch client, the Suns
resisted unwilling to part with their number four pick, which they plan to use to draft Josh Jackson.
Ouch.
And then she wrote, no formal offer was made,
but news of the potential transaction stung Irving,
whose sources close to him say became convinced that LeBron's camp,
which also represents Bledsoe, orchestrated the trade talks.
So you had all these butthurt teams.
Phoenix, Cleveland's bad,
Boston's bad.
And it
turned out Indiana made a great deal.
This is why
trades are crazy, right?
Old deep bonus for
Paul George heading into the last year
of his deal, and it turns out to be an awesome deal
for Indiana.
Because if you're staring at the the deal
going okay all i have to do is say yes to this or something that hasn't been proven yet when you're
talking about the celtics draft pick at three and the history of like go through the last 10 years
of just the top 10 picks you don't even have to do the full lottery picks 11 through 14 goes through
the top 10 and how many guys are on a second team like within four years
and there are certain years where you could put the work in and say hey this is going to be really
deep and we're going to want those kinds of guys but like what paul george is and based on the
celtics success this season and ultimately we'll see how this all finishes up here but the emphasis
on the big wing that can score three level score can defend and all that stuff. You're like, OK, I can have one of those guys right now.
So, of course, you would want to do a lot of these deals.
But I remember with it just the fear that Oklahoma City was incredibly bold.
But when I talked to other teams about it was like, what's the point?
What's he's going to go to the lake?
Right.
He's not going to resign there.
And then Presti ends up keeping him
which I think is one of the funniest things ever
that I'm convinced they threw a huge free agency party
just so it would be awkward for him to say he was going
somewhere else
and Oladipo
who had a stretch
there with the Pacers a few years ago
where he was like
he looked like a top 10 guy
and then on top of that was the bonus
and everything else so the the thunder i look at that trade and wonder like as much as people are
saying oh prestige is going to stockpile and maybe the next mad star you can't do that but
i mean that's in his his his playbook to be incredibly bold when the rest of the league thinks it doesn't make any sense.
And I wonder if we're going to be reminded of that again here soon.
Ooh, good tease.
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Speaking of the draft, I can sense you're diving into it a little bit.
You've got some Reed Shepard thoughts. You've got some Reed Shepard thoughts.
I do have some Reed Shepard thoughts.
Let's hear it.
Ken.
Well, I'm just afraid because of the Jokic,
Luca,
Caitlin Clark,
Chet Hanks,
White Boy Summer.
Is the world ready
for Reed Shepard to go
number one as a
6'1.5 guard
from Kentucky?
I'm just saying
if that happens... The climate's not perfect
for it? I just don't know.
I don't know if people are ready
for this because white guys
are having a moment right now
and white gals
when it comes to the hoops world
so
I'm just telling
he's probably one of the best shooting prospects
I've seen in 20 years
of doing the draft
wow
I don't know who would say
that he isn't
well that's
where it's a little tougher
Peyton Pritchard
when I
looked at his synergy numbers Bill I'm going to share
them with you here I have to find them
as you're looking I'll
go ahead
I'll tell you well ask Kyle Mann
because Kyle Mann Kentucky guy
obviously has been following him, so my question was,
is it crazy to think Reed Shepard would be the greatest version ever of Peyton Pritchard,
which is, I mean that as a compliment, not an insult. Like if you watch Peyton Pritchard in
the finals and just think like, what if Peyton Pritchard was awesome in game five?
And that was just Reed Shepard every game, right?
Like undersized, feisty, little stronger than anything.
Teams keep attacking him, but he can fend it off.
And then on the other end, he's just making everything.
I just don't know.
There's not a lot of doppelgangers,
but Kyle Mann loves his, loves his defensive hands. Um, he thinks offensively that could he be better than Tyler Hero?
He thinks sounds great.
Um, and it's just really a really smart player who can shoot the lights out and has a good handle.
That's not nothing.
I'm, I'm higher on him than I was a week ago as I dive in.
I'm not as high as you, you seem like delighted by him.
Well, I'm cautiously delighted though, because I don't know what to do. Now the six,
one and a half, I think it's also important to point out that they stopped doing the combine measurement in shoots. So every one of these guys over the history of all these measurements,
whatever their listed height was, and then whatever ended up on ESPN.com when you
pulled up their page stuff, that was always the height with shoes. So for whatever reason in this
really weird development, they said, let's just stop doing that. So basically like everybody's
height was a lie. Everyone's height was a lie for every one of you right now. Like your favorite
player wasn't actually as tall as he was listed wow it's like when they
changed the tv ratings out of nowhere and all of a sudden everybody is like no now bars and airports
count it's like what everyone's having their best year ever that's like the reverse where i'd go
so wait we're good if a guy fills out in pencil and hand writes in a radio journal his fucking
radio diary that he liked the show that's how we're good or bad yeah that seems to be a little
outdated okay so even knowing that out of the combine like reed shepherd is now magically six three yeah it's a lot when you're
talking about him potentially being in the mix as a number one pick now the shooting stuff but
but wait it's not a lot when we do the exercise which we now talk about every week that you just
have to pretend the top seven has been chopped out of the draft and you're taking rich shepherd as the eighth pick he just happens to be first yeah yeah okay i'm glad you reminded
me of of the rule that we brought up and i don't mean that with any snark it's it's what you have
to keep doing it's like whenever anyone signed a contract with a new tv cap and i made the joke
like anytime there was a new contract you you're like, what? And then somebody
would try to explain it to like a, you or me as if we didn't already know, like, Hey, well, you know,
the cap goes up. You're like, yeah, I know. I know the cap did go up. That's why Evan Turner's
worth $72 million. Right. So in this Alan Crabb, 70 million, are you kidding? No, no, dude,
it's totally fine. The cap went up. so no contract is bad now because the cap went up
so if you do the same thing apply the same principle with this draft you go okay stop
getting caught up in like what the number one pick is supposed to look like because
this year is just not going to happen my good friends at synergy
love the program so shout out to them. Big part of my summer.
His catch and shoot numbers,
they do the percentile of like where you rank based on these different shot types.
So on catch and shoot,
he's 1.54 points per shot, 99th percentile.
Guarded, he's in the 96th percentile.
It's still at 1.3 plus.
Unguarded, if you leave him open, Bill,
it's fucking over.
And that's something when you watch his tape just over and over and over again.
It's one thing that he gets into his dribble jumper off the high screen.
And if the lower defender isn't there to meet him immediately, you're toast.
He's good at getting to the mid-range stuff.
He really does play.
Despite he and Dillingham taking turns with possessions,
when he's running the possession, it's his possession, and he looks like a point guard.
He looks far more like a point guard than Stephon Castle does, all right?
Yeah.
And if he's just open, open, like it's swung to the other side,
and then he cuts and finds himself behind the three-point line, it's a layup from out there.
And all of these numbers, whether it's catch and shoot, dribble, jump, or guarded, unguarded,
it's all between the 96th and 99th percentile of college basketball players this season.
Jesus.
And the tape backs all of it up.
And I think the part that makes me more excited about him is his passing.
Because he really has, whether it's the deep drive where the defense collapses
and he kicks it back out behind him.
Like, there's some stuff there that he's born with.
I really feel that way about point guards.
And I'm not saying he's like Jason Kidd or anything,
but Jason Kidd was born that way.
You know I'm with you on this theory.
You don't learn how to be an awesome point guard.
You have some sort of chromosome in your soul gets you there.
Totally.
And there's parts where he'll get maybe
the first outlet off the defensive rebound and he would be totally within his right as a great
shooter to just never want to give the ball up and try to find that spot and actually this is
one of the things i love about scoots so maybe i'm jinxing him here but he's he's looking to get the
ball up you know he doesn't it's it's not, he's this unbelievable option
with all of these shooting numbers,
but he's still okay making sure
he's getting some other people involved.
Now, he's not going to beat you up.
So head up all the time.
Yeah.
Always looking for somebody else.
Can't miss when he's wide open.
Can't miss.
Start with those three things.
That sounds great.
Yep.
Now, he gets lost in the trees
at that size athletically the testing stuff is hilarious because the same thing with dalton
connect where you're watching dalton going man this guy's got some some bounce to him like what's
and then you look at connects athletic testing at the combine and all the numbers are off the charts
shepherd when you're watching him you're like okay how good
of an athlete is he because you've got dillingham on the other side of it just a jitterbug he's just
really tough to stay in front of and shepherd certainly not that but then you wonder like okay
i wonder what shepherd did athletically well he tied for the highest max vert jump at the combine
at 42 inches oh my god, we're not talking about
him and Bronny James?
No.
Bronny James was
40 and a half.
Devin Carter from Providence College
I think actually came in first technically
and he's his own
story. Nine boards a game as
a guard, which is just incredible is just well let me ask you this
because everything you just laid out the draft the top four is atlanta washington houston san
antonio from what you just laid out washington houston and san antonio could all use a guy like
the guy you just described washington definitely they don't have a point guard houston seems like
somebody who could be a third guard off the bench,
but eventually a Van Vliet replacement.
And then San Antonio, that sounds like literally exactly what they need.
So is your case, it's not inconceivable that he could go to number one
because Atlanta doesn't need somebody like that
because they have the two guards?
Yeah.
And yet the other three teams right after them are like,
we actually want that guy.
And we're afraid somebody else is going to take them.
So let's just fucking move up and grab them at one.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
And just kind of off of last week where I think both of us have heard enough
now for the last couple of weeks and just about clinging bullshit,
bullshit with guys and just, Oh, be ready to be surprised.
So just have an open mind about all this stuff.
So when I watched Reed this week, and I'm late to it,
but I was thinking about other great shooters.
Like JJ was an incredible shooter, but he also was bigger
and he was a really good athlete.
And you saw his development at duke where jj went from
somebody who provided spacing to somebody who was controlling the ball in big possessions getting to
the free throw line and so once jj did that i was like okay wait a minute this guy has like a real
chance here like he should be a lottery pick this isn't just some kid at duke who's making a bunch
of threes there's way more to his overall game clay when he was at washington state
i don't think he had the ball i don't think he used the ball the way i don't know i could be
forgetting it but i i read controls possessions more so than he's just somebody that provides
all this kind of shooting but even at his worst bill which is again not your default for you're
talking about potentially a number one pick when he looks like Reed Shepard, you go, well, we know we know this. He's going to make open shots immediately. Like that's not ever going to go away. He already shows you the NBA range. And it's it's just absurd. Like, you can just see the defenders in these SEC games when they lose track of them. And then they see the ball swung to his side and
you just like the head down like I can't believe I let him get away from me but there's more to it
than just spacing it's just a matter of like what is the team going to allow him to do are they
going to bring him in and be rookie point guard and be like all right you're in charge of all
these possessions when I think rim finishing for him is probably going to be a bit of a challenge
despite the vertical that we talked about he's just that's asking a lot of somebody that size to be getting to the rim and finishing so if that never happens
and he's still somewhat limited the shooting is so special bill and it's both it's not just
catch and shoot it's him dribbling and getting into his jumper where both of those numbers are
like the best in college basketball why would that not translate? Shooting is the number
one thing that translates.
Well, shooting and
defense, because I think Castle, with
the defense, he'll be fine.
Right? He will be
worst case scenario, he's in the Derek Jones
spot for an awesome
playoff team someday.
Hold on. I'm glad you brought up Castle though though because I went through and watched every one of his
pick and roll ball handling possessions because I was just trying to find it.
Show me the point guard playmaking side
of it. I think it's 71 possessions and he took shots on 57 of the 71.
Utah
at 10, Oklahoma City at 12 would be the other ones
I think for a Reed Shepard move up
and the reason I mention them is because Utah has a ton of picks
and Oklahoma City has a ton of picks
and this is the draft where maybe you could sneak up
to three, Houston's going to be the wild card
but everything you laid out just sounds like somebody washington should take but probably won't because they're they're just gonna be too enamored by the
possibility of having two french guys um this is a fun draft i can see that i can see the uh
pep in your step it's just weird there's it's gonna go all over the map. I've embraced it. I really have. I've embraced it. Look, I
started watching Bozellas
going, man, if
this guy could shoot,
he might be the number one pick.
First of all, if Bozellas
consistently could hit three-point shots, I think he's
the number one pick in this draft.
He's the Franz
guy. He's a little
Franz-ish, right?
Yeah.
Uh,
well,
I'm not just saying that
because they're both white.
Feels,
feels a bit like that.
6'10",
195.
Have you ever been able
to do a good
black-white comp?
Many,
many times.
Oh,
really?
Share one.
Many times.
I don't know,
I can't remember
off the top of my head,
but it was, it was always, I always used to love having that in my column, like trying to cross over. It's always a good one.
Bring people together.
Yeah.
Especially, we're going to need it. We're going to we haven't even talked about the NBA finals yet. And we didn't play What Would You Do?
And I didn't even ask Rusillo if he's following the Karen retrial.
So we're taking all of that to part two.
Part one was produced by Kyle Creighton and by Steve Cerruti.
Thanks, Rusillo.
We'll see you on the way. So I don't have.
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