
Karl Anthony Towns: The NBA's Next Great Big Man
For much of its history, the NBA has seen many of its best teams built
around great centers. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is the league’s all-time
leading scorer, while names like Wilt Chamberlain and Bill Russell are
as well-known as any in basketball history. From 1989 through 2005,
six centers combined for three MVPs and 473 1st place votes. In the
10 seasons since, however, big men have received a total of seven 1st
place votes (all for Dwight Howard). As the game has shifted toward
more athletic players and three point shooters, the center position
has, for the most part, been relegated to a supporting role. One
player, however, may be the exception in the new NBA.
By the All-Star break this year, Karl-Anthony Towns already had more
win shares than LeBron James, Kevin Durant, Derrick Rose or Dwyane
Wade had during their rookie campaigns. The Minnesota center is on
pace to finish the 2015-16 NBA season with an impressive 8.1 win
shares, which would trail only Blake Griffin and Chris Paul among
rookies in the past dozen years. In reality, however, his play has
improved quite a bit since the start of the season, so 8.1 is likely a
conservative estimate.
Per Game Stats for Towns Before and After New Year’s Day
|
Stat | Pre Jan 1 | Since Jan 1 | |
Games | 33 | 28 | |
Points/Game | 16.4 | 18.4 | |
Rebounds/Game | 9.4 | 11.4 | |
Assists/Game | 1.1 | 2.3 |
If Towns is able to sustain his recently improved play and reach 9 win
shares this year, he’d be the first NBA rookie center to do so since
Orlando’s Shaquille O’Neal back in 1993.
For all of his impressive historical comparisons with other NBA
rookies, Towns is already one of the best big men in the league today.
He is currently third among all centers with at least 500 minutes
played in Player Efficiency Rating (a measure of per-minute
production), trailing only the Heat’s Hassan Whiteside and the Kings’
DeMarcus Cousins.
Towns’s ability to score efficiently has significantly contributed to
his value on the court. The former Kentucky Wildcat has the highest
field goal percentage among the 80 NBA players with at least 600 FG
attempts. And that’s not simply attributable to his being 7 feet tall
and collecting a lot of easy dunks and put-backs. Towns is one of
only five starting centers (Pau Gasol, Al Horford, Kelly Olynyk and
Myles Turner) this year to have taken over a third of his shots from
16 feet and beyond.
Another notable strength of Towns’s game is his talent for corralling
defensive rebounds. Per basketball-reference.com, he has grabbed
28.0% of available defensive rebounds while he has been on the floor
this season. To put that figure in perspective, Dennis Rodman is the
all-time career leader (minimum 15,000 minutes played) at 29.6%. Only
one first-year player in NBA history has previously reached 28% –
Portland’s Arvydas Sabonis, who came to the league after playing six
professional seasons in Europe and was 31 years old when he joined the
Trail Blazers.
Though it’s difficult to find many flaws in his game, Towns could
stand to get to the charity stripe a bit more often and take advantage
of his strong free throw shooting. He leads all centers this year in
free throw percentage (minimum 50 attempts) at 82.5%, but has taken
only .246 free throws per field goal attempt. That places him 27th of
the top 30 centers in minutes played, using that metric.
Overall, Towns has proven he could be a force in the NBA for many
years to come. If he wins the Rookie of the Year Award, he will
become the first center to do so since Memphis’s Pau Gasol back in
2001-02. However, despite all of the success Towns has achieved this
year individually, the Timberwolves are going to finish below .500 for
an incredible 11th straight season. That represents the longest active
streak in the four major American sports. By drafting one of the best
young centers the league has seen in perhaps a generation, though, it
seems unlikely that Minnesota’s postseason drought will last much
longer.
Written by:
      Eric Eisenberg
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