Should Al Horford Have Won the NBA Rookie of the Year?

By Lee Andrew Henderson, published May 01, 2008
Published Content: 1,209  Total Views: 939,965  Favorited By: 224 CPs
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After Kevin Durant was given the NBA Rookie of the Year Award Atlanta Hawks coach, Mike Woodson, was furious. Woodson thinks that at the very least Al Horford should have shared the honor with Kevin Durant, if not won it outright. "We haven't had a power forward/center come into our league and do what's he's done in I don't know how many years," Woodson said.

Okay, so maybe Woodson needs to take a NBA history class since Emeka Okafor averaged a double-double in '05 and Elton Brand averaged a double-double in 2000. But that is beside the point. The question isn't "was Al Horford better than Emeka Okafor or Elton Brand?" The question is "was Al Horford better than Kevin Durant?"

Kevin Durant scored 20 points per game. That is quite a feat. The last five rookies to average 20 points or more per game were Lebron James, Elton Brand, Tim Duncan, Allen Iverson and Shaquille O'Neal. But the problem is Kevin Durant played on a team that only won 20 out of 82 games. Seattle had nobody else on the team so Kevin Durant had the luxury of shooting as often as he wanted. Part of the reason he scored 20 points per game is simply the amount of shots he took.

Kevin Durant also made a very low percentage of shots. Out of the 27 players that averaged 20 points per game Durant was 24th in shooting percentage. So yes, Durant scored 20 points per game and that's impressive but he just did one thing and that's all.

What Al Horford did was more difficult. First of all Al Horford averaged 9.7 rebounds per game. Anybody that can shoot or has a good move to the basket can score 20 points in a season if they get enough shots. But a rookie that is physically ready for the NBA in his rookie season is very rare. The rookies that averaged more than 9.7 rebounds since 2000-2001 include just Emeka Okafor and Dwight Howard.

Al Horford, playing the power forward and center positions, had to go toe to toe with the likes of Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett, Dwight Howard and all the other big men in the league. Kevin Durant had to face some good players too of course, but he didn't have to go up against the most physical players in the league.

Comments
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I'm really trying to get up to speed on sports articles by reading your well-written pieces :)

Posted on 05/03/2008 at 4:05:31 AM

 
Nice work~Well done!

Posted on 05/02/2008 at 2:05:09 PM

 
Durant was on a terrible team Brian. The voters just picked the player with the most hype. Of course the Hawks aren't very good at this point either, but really they should just given Durant the award on draft night if they weren't going to factor in the season.

Posted on 05/02/2008 at 11:05:19 AM

 
I enjoyed this, even if I think you are being a little harsh on Durant. The big thing is that Durant came in and did what he did at age 19. Horford was two years older. When Kobe Bryant was 19, he had already played in the NBA for a year and he averaged 15.4 points per game. Durant bettered that by almost five full points. Durant also played out of position, frequently playing shooting guard and asked to do what he really couldn't do - shoot from long distance (29% from 3-point land). Hopefully, the Sonics can move him inside, he can put on more weight and in two years when he's 21, he'll put up a year Horford can only dream about.

Posted on 05/02/2008 at 9:05:41 AM

 
:-) Dugg!

Posted on 05/02/2008 at 5:05:12 AM

 
I agree also, points are easier than rebounds. Plus Atlanta beat Boston twice in the playoffs, so something is happennig there. Mike Woodson is no dummy; when the Pistons won in '04 he was the lead coach on defense, and as much as everybody says the NBA East sucks so bad, at least none of the East qualifiers are defensive pushovers like the Nuggets, and so Horford's stats were harder earned. Finally, underrated AC author Jamie Marable is a Hawks fan and that also is significant in my case. Thanks Lee, that is pretty good considering that basketball is only your sixth or seventh sport! -- Mike

Posted on 05/02/2008 at 12:05:37 AM

 
Excellent job on this I agree 100%. What else is there to say. You said it all. :-)

Posted on 05/01/2008 at 10:05:48 PM

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