
This group has a ton of prospects from smaller schools, but the last two guys who I added mostly for fun, John Brown and Terry Tarpey, come from low majors.
Looking at the measurements, only Terry Tarpey looks potentially too small to play SF in the NBA. Damion Lee may be smaller than his listed height and thus also small for an NBA SF, but we can’t know for sure. On the other hand, there are plenty of tall prospects this year, including the top two picks, as well as Jake Layman, and James Webb III.
Length wise, Ingram and Jaylen Brown have seriously long arms, each at least 5” longer than their height in shoes. Meanwhile, Layman, Georges Niang and Troy Williams have short arms for their height. This is surprising for Williams given how well he racked up steals and blocks.
Offense

The top scorers of this group are John Brown and Georges Niang, who both scored on excellent efficiency. Of next group of scorers, Perry Ellis and Ben Simmons scored efficiently, while Taurean Prince and Jaylen Brown were very inefficient.
Jake Layman, Jordan Fouse and Terry Tarpey scored quite little. Layman was very efficient, while Fouse struggled to be efficient despite the low scoring burden. DeAndre Bembry struggled with efficiency as well.
Jaylen Brown led all SFs in USG%, obviously to his and his team’s detriment given his poor efficiency.
Ben Simmons predictably stands out with the leading AST%, followed by DeAndre Bembry and Georges Niang. Ellis, Layman and Webb all have an AST% below 10%.
Jaylen Brown compounds his poor efficiency with a high TOV%, while John Brown avoided turnovers very well, indicating that much of his offense comes from finishing plays rather than creating them. Prince joins Jaylen Brown in pairing poor efficiency with turnover troubles. Terry Tarpey and Jake Layman somehow struggle with turnovers in spite of very low usage rates. Finally, Troy Williams leads all SFs with the worst TOV%.
John Brown comes out ahead of a host of combo-forwards in offensive rebounding, averaging nearly 5 per40 pace adjusted. Damion Lee comes out as the worst, giving me more evidence that he isn’t the 6’6” they have him listed at. Georges Niang and Jake Layman stand out for struggling on the offensive glass in spite of their height. Terry Tarpey, Jaylen Brown and DeAndre Bembry all contributed little on the offensive glass.
The Net ORtg column is bookended by Browns; John at the top, Jaylen at the bottom. John Brown is followed by Dorian Finney-Smith. Jaylen Brown’s massive -10 should come as little surprise given that he rated poorly in everything but USG%, similar to Taurean Prince. But Brandon Ingram is a huge surprise to see at the bottom of this list given that he didn’t rate poorly at anything. Terry Tarpey and Troy Williams all come out as net-negatives on offense as well.
Penetration

This SF class has a lot of competent but few exciting slashers. Niang and Williams lead the class in converting looks at the rim in the half court, while Tarpey and Prince rate exceptionally poorly.
5 SFs took over half of their shots within 3 feet of the basket, including Derrick Jones, John Brown, Troy Williams, Terry Tarpey, and Ben Simmons. Brandon Ingram was the only SF to take less than a quarter of his shots at the rim.
Few prospects struggled with finishing at the rim, with the standout finishers being Layman, Niang, Webb, Simmons. Only Ingram and Fouse converted less than 60% of their shots at the rim.
Dorian Finney-Smith is the only prospect to excel at drawing fouls. Simmons, Jaylen Brown and Damion Lee were pretty good at it. Most prospects struggled to draw contact however, the worst offender being Georges Niang.
Ingram explains his struggles at the rim a bit with his elite %assisted, with just 15% of his made rim looks being assisted. Jaylen Brown has rated as a solid penetrators and gets a boost for his low %assisted too. Prince had the highest % of his makes at the rim assisted.
Shooting

Everyone from Lee on up is a capable 3 point shooter, with Ellis having the best 3P% this year and for his career. Ingram actually doesn’t project well as a shooter due to his poor foul shooting, but I don’t think that anyone has serious concerns about his jump shot. Damion Lee should get some credit for his great foul shooting and the amount of shots he had to create for himself.
Of the non-shooters, Terry Tarpey and James Webb III both had a season where they shot over 40% from three, so they do have some potential as shooters at least.
Passing

Simmons naturally stands out as a passer, leading the group in assists. He’s followed by Bembry, Niang and Fouse. Layman, Ellis and Webb passed very little.
Only Simmons, Bmbry and Fouse managed to pair their assist with an A/TO over 1.5. Many struggled with poor A/TOs, including Williams, Jaylen Brown, Webb and Layman.
Although they had solid A/TOs, Simmons, Tarpey and Prince turned the ball over too much. Ellis on the other hand, took excellent care of the ball, as did John Brown. Williams, Jaylen Brown and Layman all have serious turnover issues.
AST/USG gives us an idea of who is a shooter and who is a pass-first guy, and the results mostly speak for themselves.
Defense

If you’ve been wondering why I bothered to include Terry Tarpey, this is why. Defense, baby. Tarpey leads all SFs in steals, followed by Fouse, Simmons, and John Brown. James Webb and Troy Williams are good too, Williams is particularly impressive due to his poor length. I don’t count Damion Lee because he was playing a press defense which inflates steal rates a bit.
John Brown is this group’s top shot-blocker. He’s followed by Tarpey, Fouse and Ingram. Tarpey and Fouse get credit for playing taller than their height here. Damion Lee somehow didn’t block a single shot all year.
Simmons is unsurprisingly the top defensive rebounder, followed by Tarpey, Webb and Finney-Smith. Lee again plays small, rebounding like a point guard instead of a wing.
Overall, this class features a boatload of competent defenders, and a number of guys who could play real impact defense at SF, particularly Tarpey, Simmons, Fouse, Webb, John Brown, Williams and Bembry. Guys like Finney-Smith, and Prince didn’t rate as outstanding defenders but have good potential due to their ability to guard either forward position. Niang, Lee and Ellis are the only guys who clearly suck on defense.