Mobley might fukk around and win ROY. I gotta say, he's got all the tools to be a franchise-changing defensive piece. He's that good on that end.
Not to be that guy again, but Evan Mobley is exactly who many thought Wiseman would be. It's unfortunate he didn't somehow land in GS. He reminds me of Duncan, purely in the sense that he's ready to contribute to a winning team in his rookie season.
His style of play is nothing like Duncan's, he just reminds me of him as a rookie, in terms of what influence he has on winning.
And what I mean by that is, he plays beyond his years, where everything he does on the floor contributes to actual impact, even if he isn't putting up box score numbers. It's that poise and BBIQ that makes them look like they've been here before in a past life. That's how good he is. There aren't too many rookie big men in the last twenty years you can say that about. Usually it takes them a while to work out things, especially in this day and age.
Nxggas thought I was crazy comparing him to Duncan during the preseason, but he actually has a genuine chance of being the first rookie to make an All-Defensive team since... you guessed it, Tim Duncan in '97/'98.For real though, it's about what he does defensively, that's how I see a bit of Duncan in him.
Usually rookie big men are known to make their name purely off highlight blocks, and while he does do that, it's more about the little things: making the right rotations, not biting on fakes, being in the right place at the right time, and just willing to take on a greater role on that end of the floor. Rookie big men don't do that sort of thing. They don't have have that desire, experience and foresight. They're typically about making highlight plays on that end by showing off their athleticism. Mobley isn't concerned with that. That shows someone who's wise beyond his years, who sees the bigger picture, just like Duncan did when he was a rookie.
And while he most definitely does NOT have Duncan's refinement and scoring skillset, he does make the right reads on offense too, and just knows where to be and what to do. This is evident in his passing, whether it be baiting the help defender into coming over and then passing to his assignment, or in the PnR either as the roll-man or as the ball-handler and finding the open man.
1st in the league in contested shots
5th in eFG% on primary defensive matchups out of all qualified big men
2nd in Keep-in-Front Drive% out of all qualified big men (only just behind Draymond)
4th in defensive rating out of all qualified big men (only behind Giannis, Jokic and Draymond)
90 percentile in protecting the rim (holding opponents to -10% under their average FG%).
A legit seven-footer with a 7'4” wingspan, who has the lateral spring of a wing, BBIQ as high as any rookie in recent memory, and the desire/motor to do everything on that end of the floor. I'm surprised that his rookie campaign isn't being discussed more because he's already one of the league's premier defenders.
Taking on any and every defensive assignment; being a one-man zone and shutting down entire spaces all by himself; protecting the rim, the three-point line and everywhere in between at a high level; being disciplined enough to chess-move with established stars without getting baited into fouls.
He really does it all on defense, and at only 20 years of age, gives the Cavs hope at ushering in an era that's worth talking about, post-LeBron.
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