Okay, so my point was that if you're trying to prove that HP Fighting/Toxic/Refresh are gimmicky options and have big drawbacks, you shouldn't point them to usage statistics as those prove nothing at all and there's plenty of underused sets that work amazingly in the current metagame.
Rather than doing that, you should point out their flaws.
E.G. "HP Fighting isn't actually that great of an option on Latias, because it has better options to hit any pokemon besides Tyranitar, Grass knot hits Tyranitar almost as hard and it has better utility on other pokemon too, it doesn't force you into dropping your Special Attack with Draco Meteor in order to hit water types hard, especially Gastrodon and Quagsire, both of which can prove to be quite a nuisance to offensive teams. Specs Latios could more viably use HP Fighting, as unlike Latias, it actually OHKO's ScarfTar after Stealth Rock, which Grass Knot wouldn't achieve."
"Latias is quite defensive, and most defensive pokemon are great at using toxic to their advantage, Latias however, isn't one of them. Latias, unlike toxic users like Chansey, actually has a good offense behind that amazing bulk, and doesn't absolutely need toxic to do consistent damage, it also differentiates it from Toxic users like Heatran and Gliscor, as while those two have STABs that seriously harm steel types if they were to stay in, most of Latias' switch-ins are actually Steel-type, meaning Toxic is frequently more of a liability than anything."
"Refresh is a great move for a tanky set-up sweeper like Latias, as it allows it to clear itself from Status conditions, however this move faces heavy competition from the move "Substitute", Substitute helps Latias shield from status but it's also a great buffer for pursuit trappers, which refresh Latias absolutely despises. It also is immensely helpful for Latias to scout your opponent's move. While this is at a cost of being able to switch directly into status moves, most teams would value not losing their latias as easily pursuit trappers a lot more, as there is a lot of pressure put on Latias in the current metagame."
"I absolutely love Specs Latias, it's probably one of my favourite sets in the OU metagame right now, but it only has a few very specific niches, and it's definitely not for every team. If you just slap it on your standard team, you'll be wondering to yourself why you aren't using either Specs Latios, or a more defensive Latias set. Your team needs to capitalise on the superior bulk along with the still amazing power, maybe even the surprise value and the ability to use healing wish ( or just species clause being a thing, if you're planning to use Specs Latios alongside it ), otherwise you'll regret your decision to use Specs Latias."
Latias has a great movepool, and while it has so many options, the niches of most non-standard sets are just too small to use on just any team, which is means while at first glance it's amazingly versatile, in practice, it's rather one-dimensional compared to a variety of other pokemon in OU.
After we've established that Latias really isn't as versatile as one might suspect, we have to look at that crippling pursuit weakness alongside the fact that while it can get around it's checks and counters, it has a great difficulty in doing so.
Overall, Latias is still an amazing pokemon, but it still requires a lot of support and it's just not quite S-Rank material.
And to think this was supposed to be a summary ;_;
Anyways that was just how I see things, so feel free to just dismiss all of it haha
Rather than doing that, you should point out their flaws.
E.G. "HP Fighting isn't actually that great of an option on Latias, because it has better options to hit any pokemon besides Tyranitar, Grass knot hits Tyranitar almost as hard and it has better utility on other pokemon too, it doesn't force you into dropping your Special Attack with Draco Meteor in order to hit water types hard, especially Gastrodon and Quagsire, both of which can prove to be quite a nuisance to offensive teams. Specs Latios could more viably use HP Fighting, as unlike Latias, it actually OHKO's ScarfTar after Stealth Rock, which Grass Knot wouldn't achieve."
"Latias is quite defensive, and most defensive pokemon are great at using toxic to their advantage, Latias however, isn't one of them. Latias, unlike toxic users like Chansey, actually has a good offense behind that amazing bulk, and doesn't absolutely need toxic to do consistent damage, it also differentiates it from Toxic users like Heatran and Gliscor, as while those two have STABs that seriously harm steel types if they were to stay in, most of Latias' switch-ins are actually Steel-type, meaning Toxic is frequently more of a liability than anything."
"Refresh is a great move for a tanky set-up sweeper like Latias, as it allows it to clear itself from Status conditions, however this move faces heavy competition from the move "Substitute", Substitute helps Latias shield from status but it's also a great buffer for pursuit trappers, which refresh Latias absolutely despises. It also is immensely helpful for Latias to scout your opponent's move. While this is at a cost of being able to switch directly into status moves, most teams would value not losing their latias as easily pursuit trappers a lot more, as there is a lot of pressure put on Latias in the current metagame."
"I absolutely love Specs Latias, it's probably one of my favourite sets in the OU metagame right now, but it only has a few very specific niches, and it's definitely not for every team. If you just slap it on your standard team, you'll be wondering to yourself why you aren't using either Specs Latios, or a more defensive Latias set. Your team needs to capitalise on the superior bulk along with the still amazing power, maybe even the surprise value and the ability to use healing wish ( or just species clause being a thing, if you're planning to use Specs Latios alongside it ), otherwise you'll regret your decision to use Specs Latias."
Latias has a great movepool, and while it has so many options, the niches of most non-standard sets are just too small to use on just any team, which is means while at first glance it's amazingly versatile, in practice, it's rather one-dimensional compared to a variety of other pokemon in OU.
After we've established that Latias really isn't as versatile as one might suspect, we have to look at that crippling pursuit weakness alongside the fact that while it can get around it's checks and counters, it has a great difficulty in doing so.
Overall, Latias is still an amazing pokemon, but it still requires a lot of support and it's just not quite S-Rank material.
And to think this was supposed to be a summary ;_;
Anyways that was just how I see things, so feel free to just dismiss all of it haha
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