
How Will History Remember Anthony Davis' Masterpiece of a Season?
In 15 years, when Anthony Davis announces his retirement after the New Orleans Pelicans beat the Mexico City Matadors in the NBA Finals, people will look back at his career and think of this year as when we first knew heโd be one of the greatest ever.
The man with a unibrow is already establishing himself as special. In fact, what heโs doing is downright extraordinary. Per Basketball-Reference.com, only two other players have put up his per-36-minuteย stats their first three seasons, and they turned out to be pretty good:
| Player | TRB | AST | STL | BLK | TOV | PTS | TS% | WS/48 |
| David Robinson | 12.0 | 2.3 | 1.8 | 3.9 | 2.9 | 23.6 | 0.604 | 0.255 |
| Anthony Davis | 10.3 | 1.6 | 1.4 | 2.7 | 1.6 | 21.1 | 0.582 | 0.218 |
| Hakeem Olajuwon | 11.6 | 2.1 | 1.6 | 3.1 | 2.9 | 22.3 | 0.559 | 0.181 |
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And that only scratches the surface. David Robinson was 24 his rookie season. Hakeem Olajuwon was 21 when he started out. Davis just turned 22 on March 11. But thatโs not what will make this year the one we knew heโd be extraordinary.

Davis is getting better. This year heโs looking to become just the eighth player in history to record a player efficiency rating over 30. Here is every player to hit that mark and the age they were when they did it (not including Chris Paulโs 2008-09 season when his PER was rounded up to 30.0).
| Player | Season | Age โด | PER |
| Anthony Davis | 2014-15 | 21 | 31.1 |
| Tracy McGrady | 2002-03 | 23 | 30.3 |
| LeBron James | 2008-09 | 24 | 31.7 |
| Michael Jordan | 1987-88 | 24 | 31.7 |
| Wilt Chamberlain | 1961-62 | 25 | 31.7 |
| Dwyane Wade | 2008-09 | 27 | 30.4 |
| Shaquille O'Neal | 1999-00 | 27 | 30.6 |
| David Robinson | 1993-94 | 28 | 30.7 |
But thatโs not the reason weโll look back at this season and remember Davis, either.
Heโs averaging 24.6 points on 59.6 percent true shooting, 3.0 blocks and 10.4 rebounds. He could realistically join David Robinson, Patrick Ewing and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to average 25, 10 and 3 with 60.0 percent true shooting.
If the Pelicans donโt make the playoffs, Davis would be the first player to post numbers like that without making the postseason. But he wonโt go down in history for that, either.
Davis emerged as a clutch shooter, tying for the league lead with four makes in five attempts with the game on the line. That included an impossible three-point shot with multiple hands in his face. But thatโs not what weโll be talking about when he retires.
The Pelicans arenโt dead in the playoff hunt. Far from it, in fact. Just two games behind the Oklahoma City Thunder in the loss column, they have the easier remaining schedule and the tiebreaker. Davis would become a legend if the Pelicans made the postseason, but even that wouldnโt be the most memorable aspect of this campaign.
Sure, all those are things weโll remember about him, but they wonโt be the reason we look at this year as when we knew Davis was on track to become one of the greatest players the game had ever seen. Heโs doing things that only some of the greatest players in league history have accomplished. But thatโs more โeffectโ than โcause.โ
To appreciate that, we need to revisit his draft profile. In 2012, Jonathan Givony, writing for Draft Express, observed:
"With that said, Davis is still a fairly raw prospect in many facets offensively, giving him a considerable amount of room for growth as he continues to develop. If an opposing defense can force him to take a jump-shot, put the ball on the floor, or attempt to score in a post-up situation, they have a more than three times better chance of stopping him than if he simply catches the ball in the paint in position to finish.
"
That doesn't jive very well national TV broadcasts, but the truth is he rarely dribbles or takes a shot outside five feet, and isn't overly successful at the moment when he does, with the "he grew 8 inches in one year and used to be a point guard!" part of his narrative you often hear on
Davis couldnโt shoot. His rookie year, he made just 68 jumpers from more than 10 feet out and shot just 26.1 percent on them.
But he worked on it. He got better. In fact, this year, only Dirk Nowitzki, Al Horford, Chris Paul, J.J. Redick and Kyle Korver have hit more jumpers from at least 10 feet with a higher field-goal percentage than Davisโ 213 on 43.8 percent shooting.
Talent separates the great from the good. Skill distinguishes the all-time greats from the merely great. And skill comes from work.
Monty Williams, Davisโ coach both with the Pelicans and assistant coach on Team USA this summer, spoke to Jim Eichenhofer of NBA.comย on how the experience helped Davis:
"Anthony is improving right now (due to) experience. Heโs getting more and more experience. Heโs understanding that he is a lead dog among a number of alpha dogs. Mentally, heโs taken it up a few notches. I think Coach (Mike Krzyzewski) has been a big part of that, pushing him to be a leader and be โthe guyโ on the team.
When you think about the names on this team, and think about the impact on the game that (Davis) has, you seldom say thereโs a better player on the floor than Anthony. Thatโs got to help him from a confidence standpoint. I think thatโs where heโs improving.
Heโs always working on his game and his shot, his handle, a few more post moves, but mentally heโs getting more confidence. Thatโs going to help us going forward.
"
Williams added:
"The thing Iโve been wowed by is watching guys Iโve never been around work on their game every day. Iโve watched Steph Curry, James Harden, Klay Thompson, all of our guys, how diligent they are about their games and about their bodies. How they donโt take days off. Itโs been impressive to watch, learn and be around these guysโฆ I think thatโs had an impact on Anthony, because weโve talked about what he has to work on to improve, but when you see All-NBA guys and All-Stars whoโve done a lot more than heโs done, out there working their tails off after a two-hour practice, I think it has an impact on him. They all feed off of each other.
"
This is the year Davis proved anything was possible, and he added a new skill to his game. Itโs one thing to hone an existing ability. Itโs quite another to come back from the offseason with a completely different element.
Davis is still young, and there are so many areas he could legitimately improve.
For example, he could extend his range to deep. There are 18 players, including Davis, who have 100 field goals from at least 16 feet out who shoot better than 42.5 percent from that range. All but four of them have at least 10 threes, and as a group, they shoot a collective 42.2 percent from three. This suggests Davis can add three-point range.
Or consider the fact that while only Derrick Favors, Marcin Gortat and DeAndre Jordan have a higher field-goal percentage than him at the rim, he ranks 12th in attempts there.
Consider that. As efficient as he is, he's still barely utilizing the most efficient areas of the court. What happens when he does?
He has barely even touched on his point guard skills to include passing. And heโs just scratching the surface of his defensive potential.ย
Itโs not how great Davis is thatโs most impressive. Itโs how utterly amazing he can be.
When all is said and done, he should end up being a Love-Garnett-Olajuwon hybrid, do-everything-that-can-be-done super beastโthe most complete big man the NBA has ever seen.
All thatโs needed is time and work, and his last offseason will beย remembered as the time he showed he could put in the work. And that is what will make this year memorable. It's when "could be" became "should be."ย
Itโs guys like Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant and LeBron James who came/come back every fall with some new facet. And thatโs why what Davis did in the offseason, not the regular season, makes this the year the one weโll remember and say, โThatโs when I knew he would be one of the greatest.โ
All stats provided by Basketball-Reference.com unless otherwise stated.
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