I’ll say it one more time. He wasn’t that great to begin with. Someone said he improved. The stats say otherwise. He’s never been a great perimeter defender, so that doesn’t absolve his average rim protection. His efficiency numbers on offense took a major hit (20%) when considering his bread and butter plays. Those are the numbers. You spin them how you like. For me, as a Rockets fan, I want to see him get back to 17-18 numbers at 18-19 volume.
I'm so scared for Capela's feet and knees this season. Training camp literally starts right after tournament and he will essentially have no rest this summer. This combined with he'll have to play heavy minutes since his backup is a 37 yo Tyson Chandler. This is very bad for big men as we all know from past experiences. Some here may say Capela is overpaid but we all agree he's an integral part of our system. If Capela goes down, we might actually see Dwight back on this team out of desperation (since I think Lakers will sign Noah) and Morey has burnt bridges with Faried. This is not even considering we still don't have a proper PF and need more length on the wing. This season will say a lot about Tilman if things go wrong.
Some stats say otherwise, the ones you chose. He increased his points, asst and rebounding avg. You have yet to answer my question how many top ten rim protectors are asked to guard guys on the perimeter like Capela does? I never said he was a great perimeter defender so stop that straw man.
Who cares? When he’s protecting the rim, he isn’t all that great. If I see his numbers skyrocket because he can just roam the paint, I’ll concede the point. Counting stats are useless to determine improvement. His efficiency numbers suffered. This is a fact.
He broke his leg in 2016.... Do you mean the thumb? Cuz he wasn’t any different before or after the thumb.
You should care, because you are the one using a statistic when players being are asked to do different things. You don't know if he is all that great because you have never seen him playing that type of defense. Counting stats don't tell the complete story but they certainly are not useless, so him improving his FT % does not show any efficiency improvement?w What is the difference between his points per possession?
I do. Could have sworn the leg was 2018 season. The splits say otherwise, but its nothing very significant (he scored more before the thumb but less efficiently).
His efficiency numbers went down in some aspects with increasing his minutes ~20%. He definitely was not as good defensively with the increased workload but its really not that much. Even with decreased efficiency, the advance stats show an improvement in offensive.
But the advanced offensive metrics show overall offensive improvement. It seems like you are focusing on the minutia instead of the bigger picture. Hopefully we can get '17 production from Clint, but when you increase your minutes by ~20% then there are consequences. In spite of that, the numbers show an overall improvement in offense but a step back in defense.
capela isn't getting us a championship, when the post season starts his lobs are negated and offensively he becomes redundant. It doesn't matter how great his stats are, it's pretty noticeable his efficiency and points all drop when the defense tightens. And on defense during playoffs they keep switching him onto the perimeter, so much for rim protection. But defensively that's not really on him, MDA just doesn't adjust during playoffs
Getting "high" is something I would save for the finest produce organic farms can uncork these days, if I rolled that way at my advanced age. In fact, the only person who might be able to get "high" while on Mr Capela would be his girlfriend, OP, if she's a cowgirl (in my humble opinion). However, I am highly optimistic that he's going to have a very good season. One aspect of an improved season from Clint? He made real progress improving his percentage at the charity stripe last year, and if his incremental improvement there continues, it'll be a real plus for his effectiveness. With two world class passers tossing lobs, one taller and with more hops than the fellow we've been using at the point so often the last couple of seasons, not only do I think his lob opportunities will increase, but with more aggressiveness on his part slamming down those lobs at the hoop, and I think he'll be more aggressive this year overall around the basket, so will the number of fouls on him down low. Chris never seemed to "connect" with Clint on lobs anywhere near as well as Harden does. Not sure why, whether it was Paul's height, or simply never developing the chemistry you'd think a future Hall of Famer at the one would be capable of with his center. It was weird. However, I see Russell as being more effective there this season, both with Capella and our new addition at the 5, Tyson Chandler. That would equal more free throws, shot at the higher percentage I expect to see there from Clint, equaling more points. That, and more lobs at a new target, TC, who has a career free throw average over 60%. Good enough. It's science! So let's party!
@biff17 and @dmoneybangbang You guys desperately want to believe Capela got better in 18-19, don’t you? It’s weird. Nothing supports it. But believe what you want. As a Rockets fan, I want to see Capela actually get better, not tweak the numbers to tell a false story
Right back at ya. You want to desperately believe Capela is worse than he is, remember your weird metric of "below average" vs "above average" based off like a 2% difference.
It’s def not an improvement - and average really depends on what other people are doing. Waiting for your explanation for why 1.3 -> 1.1 ppp on rolls is also improvement