Speaking of out of context...
Which do you, personally, think is more likely, that the perfectly average and unspectacular Jason Thompson, with his career 7.3 assist percentage, is going to duplicate his career-worst 6.0 from last year, or that Carl Landry, with his career 5.2 assist percentage, is going to substantially improve upon his career second-best 5.6 from last season, let alone ever again approach his career-best 7.1 from two seasons ago? I'm curious as to why, of all the things that Landry is or is not, that you would choose to make his being a black hole or not your line in the sand?
One last direct comparison to Thompson: Jason Thompson has started in 281 games*; that's more than quadruple the number of games that Landry has started. He's played 820 more total minutes, which works out to, roughly, three more minutes per game than Landry, on average, over the course of his career. Do you know how many more shot attempts Jason Thompson has had than Carl Landry, over the course of their respective careers?
Four. Not four shot attempts per game. Four.
Why do I point that out? Because when I say that Jason Thompson's career assist percentage is 7.3, and that Carl Landry's is 5.2, someone might try to make the case that Thompson attempts more shots per game which, while (barely) factually accurate, falls way short of telling the whole story. Now, they also have had different roles relative to the respective systems they've played in, even when they played in the same system, but it's alarming to me how often Landry shoots the ball, relative to how often he passes the ball, for someone who is not supposed to be a "black hole" (FWIW, in Landry's first go-around with the Kings, he averaged 9.1 shot attempts, with a 5.7 assist percentage; in the same fifty-three game span, Thompson averaged 6.7 shots, with 7.5 assist percentage).
In fact, Carl Landry is, for the minutes he's played, tied for the eighth-worst active player in career assist percentage in the entire NBA, and the only player "higher" up on that list whose primary designation is also as an offensive player is not actually active, and only made the list because he played in two games last season (Eddy Curry). The other seven active players who average at least as many career minutes as Landry (24.5) with a lower career assist percentage are: Serge Ibaka (2.1), Bismack Biyombo (2.7), Samuel Dalembert (3.3), Maurice Harkless (3.9), Tyson Chandler (4.4), Emeka Okafor (4.7) and Kenneth Faried (5.2).
Now, quick, what do those other seven guys have in common that Landry doesn't? Hell, Nick Young has a career assist percentage of 7.6, and that dude doesn't pass to anybody!
*It's important to note that I'm not trying to pretend that Landry and Thompson have played the same number of games, so if your plan was to lead off with that, you can relax. I full recognize that Landry has played a full season longer than Thompson. But still, four more shots in 800+ more minutes.