Bonn1997 wrote:You're reducing a career of 455 shots to 102? The other 353 don't count?
Using stats without context is misleading at best and meaningless at worst. How many of those 353 shots were in Garbage Time against end-of-bench players? Since Lin has a small sample size to begin with, the 353 other shots (and minutes played primarily against 3rd string players) are relatively meaningless when projecting how Lin will compare to other starting PG's.
The OP has done a good job in trying to compare how Lin would match up statistically vs. Felton given the same system....based on the limited data from Lin at this point.
Certainly Lin has more upside potential then Felton.......however this is because we do not fully understand what Lin is yet as a player, and we have a much larger performance data pool to draw from in Felton. One could also argue that Lin also has more downside potential then Felton due to the same circumstances. One thing we do know is that Felton comes to NY at roughly half the annualized salary, so in order for Lin to have the same worth to a team, he would have to perform twice as well as Felton.
My feelings have always been that the Knicks should have brought Lin back. This would have been a prudent business decision based on his marketing revenue potential as well as how the Bird rights ruling played in to the Knicks capped out situation. From a roster perspective, they could have used JJ and Gadz to fill a separate hole (perhaps SG?)....and even though they were overpaying for Lin, it would have made the roster stronger.
It's now water under the bridge, time to move on.