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2020 NBA Draft prospects

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shangrila
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1901 » by shangrila » Wed Aug 26, 2020 9:28 pm

Jedzz wrote:
shangrila wrote:
Jedzz wrote:Perhaps you could expound on what makes Maxey more of a prospect for the NBA, and especially this team, than any of the names such as Desmond Bane, J Ramsey, Haliburton, Vassel, Tyrell Terry, and others that literally have proven a better shooter and are not garbage players outside of their shot. I mean I'm looking for some substance here to explain this. Why must we always be looking at players for this team that "must develop a shot"?

If the responses are just, "Nesmith doesn't cut it" I'm just going to have to pass on further dicussing this. Because I've never even typed his name until just now. There are plenty others and you haven't even given Nesmith the benefit of doubt that you are affording Maxey or these top 3 guys in the draft.

Nesmith was just an example. Probably an extreme one, I'll admit, given his physical limitations compared to others and that his game is only shooting. I mean, specifically with Nesmith, his defence is average at absolute best, his playmaking is below average and he doesn't have much burst and/or skill to create off the dribble. I do think he could be a 40+% 3pt shooter in the league with excellent off ball movement so that's where his value comes from but his defence stacked against Maxey's is seriously lacking.

I think there's been some miscommunication here as well. I'm not advocating for us to draft Maxey per se (I'd take him at 17 but wouldn't move up to get him). My original talk was about Edwards. I just included Maxey because he, like Edwards, didn't shoot the ball well percentage-wise but is widely considered to be a better shooter than that based on form and FT%.

If you're asking for breakdowns of those specific prospects in terms of what might be holding them back or how they stack up to Maxey, I can give it a go;

Bane - Is old, which always depresses stock (I don't agree with it, but it is what it is). He's also apparently got a "negative" wingspan; 6-4 to his 6-6 height. This might affect his abilities defensively. Otherwise though he's a great prospect and should have a 10 year career, but I do think he caps out as a role player. Just doesn't quite have the burst/athleticism to be a high level shot creator IMO. That said I wouldn't be upset if we took him at 17 and if for some ungodly reason he's there at 33 and Rosas doesn't take him I'll personally fly to Minny and slap the man. But compared to Maxey...eh, that's tough. I like both of their defensive abilities and think Maxey has more individual scoring ability but Bane has the better potential to just slot into a lineup. I think it's a toss up between them for me.

Ramsey - I haven't watched much of him, so take what I say with a grain of salt. I've seen people say he's a good defender but I don't see it and his skills outside of shooting seem rudimentary at best. Add to that he's only got a 64% FT and I worry that his shot might actually be fool's gold (3PAs suggest otherwise so it could go either way honestly). But if he can't shoot I'm not sure he provides enough otherwise. Maxey at least brings it defensively and does well moving off screens and the like to still contribute offensively so I'd give him the nod. That said, I probably do need to watch more of Ramsey.

Haliburton - Can't create for himself, can't finish with his frame, too skinny on both ends. He's a smart player but if his shot doesn't translate, which is a legit concern, then he's going to have serious issues offensively. Considering how funky his shot is and that it doesn't translate at all to off the bounce shots I'm thinking more and more that it will end up being an issue for the first few years at least. Considering our timeline, and added to his strength issues that affect both ends, I'm not a huge fan of him for us. I'd gamble on Maxey's combo of defensive ability and scoring over Hali.

Vassell - This is the guy whose shot is basically the icing. The defence is what you're drafting him for and if he can make even a league average amount of 3s he'll be a key piece on a contending team. I wouldn't draft Maxey over him in any situation.

Terry - I actually really like Terry but there's no way around his physical issues. Hopefully with strength training he can better hold his own defensively and finishing (he already finishes quite well though to be fair), but aside from that his playmaking isn't at the level you want from a PG prospect and the defence, while he's got the IQ, also isn't as good as Maxey's. Like Bane this is a toss up for me between these two, but I'd probably give Maxey the edge because I think he provides enough outside of shooting that if his shot isn't an issue he'd be the better all round player. Terry needs a little more to get there (strength, playmaking, etc) although if he's still growing like he suggested in the ESPN vid...hell, maybe he's a 2 guard and suddenly those playmaking concerns disappear entirely.

And for reference, my read on Maxey is that he's a combo guard on both ends, should be a good defender and contributor on offence with or without his shot. Swing skills are shooting and playmaking, shooting being an easy fix for him (needs to just lift his shot a bit, shoot up rather than out) and playmaking might have been hidden at Kentucky which would give him PG potential. The size limits his finishing and some defensive assignments though (bigger 2s might give him trouble, no chance of guarding 3s). Honestly I wouldn't be surprised if he went as high as 8 to the Knicks and I don't think that would be absurd. In general I think his combination of offensive and defensive abilities push him above a lot of the other guys since whatever he lacks in one area he more than makes up on the other (better offensively than Bane, better defensively than Terry for example).


Thanks for putting in the effort at least to share your thoughts on the other players. Nobody else really has. For the record though, it appears you might have a little Maxey on your chin still. I still don't think you are affording these other players the benefit of doubt you are offering him. He's literally done next to nothing amazing in college. But each paragraph and name there you compared to him suggesting he did something better. I've been looking for examples of what gets a few people so excited about him and I've yet to see much of it. I see a player capable of playing at the college level. Nothing screams he's playing above anyone else there at that level, at least that I've seen yet. Again, you are the first to take a stab at comparing any of the others so good on you.

What benefit of the doubt do you think I should be giving them?

I give non-shooters some leeway, assuming they have indicators that they could improve like FT% and 3PAr, because it's typically a skill that's easiest (not easy and certainly not automatic, but easiest) to improve. When you start getting into other issues, either skill wise like playmaking or defensive awareness or physical tools, they're much harder to grow. If you were to ask me specifically, for example, whether I believe Maxey will improve his shooting or Nesmith will improve his athleticism, I'd always choose Maxey. And you could sub those names out for any other combination of similar prospects, the answer would always be the same.

EDIT - I want to add another example so I'm not focusing solely on Nesmith. Vassell's swing skill is his handle, if he can improve that I could see him being a two way star. But do I buy him improving that over Maxey's shooting? No. However, that doesn't mean I value Maxey over Vassell. Specifically I don't think Maxey will ever be the defender Vassell is who seems supernatural on that end.

I should add that I actually like a lot of those other guys as well and that most of them are in a similar tier on my imaginary big board. The only guys I'm not big on are Haliburton, who I think is fool's gold, and Ramsey, who I don't have a great read on but I doubt his shooting given his FT%s. Everyone else is someone I'd be happy if we drafted.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1902 » by KGdaBom » Wed Aug 26, 2020 9:31 pm

shangrila wrote:
Jedzz wrote:
shangrila wrote:Nesmith was just an example. Probably an extreme one, I'll admit, given his physical limitations compared to others and that his game is only shooting. I mean, specifically with Nesmith, his defence is average at absolute best, his playmaking is below average and he doesn't have much burst and/or skill to create off the dribble. I do think he could be a 40+% 3pt shooter in the league with excellent off ball movement so that's where his value comes from but his defence stacked against Maxey's is seriously lacking.

I think there's been some miscommunication here as well. I'm not advocating for us to draft Maxey per se (I'd take him at 17 but wouldn't move up to get him). My original talk was about Edwards. I just included Maxey because he, like Edwards, didn't shoot the ball well percentage-wise but is widely considered to be a better shooter than that based on form and FT%.

If you're asking for breakdowns of those specific prospects in terms of what might be holding them back or how they stack up to Maxey, I can give it a go;

Bane - Is old, which always depresses stock (I don't agree with it, but it is what it is). He's also apparently got a "negative" wingspan; 6-4 to his 6-6 height. This might affect his abilities defensively. Otherwise though he's a great prospect and should have a 10 year career, but I do think he caps out as a role player. Just doesn't quite have the burst/athleticism to be a high level shot creator IMO. That said I wouldn't be upset if we took him at 17 and if for some ungodly reason he's there at 33 and Rosas doesn't take him I'll personally fly to Minny and slap the man. But compared to Maxey...eh, that's tough. I like both of their defensive abilities and think Maxey has more individual scoring ability but Bane has the better potential to just slot into a lineup. I think it's a toss up between them for me.

Ramsey - I haven't watched much of him, so take what I say with a grain of salt. I've seen people say he's a good defender but I don't see it and his skills outside of shooting seem rudimentary at best. Add to that he's only got a 64% FT and I worry that his shot might actually be fool's gold (3PAs suggest otherwise so it could go either way honestly). But if he can't shoot I'm not sure he provides enough otherwise. Maxey at least brings it defensively and does well moving off screens and the like to still contribute offensively so I'd give him the nod. That said, I probably do need to watch more of Ramsey.

Haliburton - Can't create for himself, can't finish with his frame, too skinny on both ends. He's a smart player but if his shot doesn't translate, which is a legit concern, then he's going to have serious issues offensively. Considering how funky his shot is and that it doesn't translate at all to off the bounce shots I'm thinking more and more that it will end up being an issue for the first few years at least. Considering our timeline, and added to his strength issues that affect both ends, I'm not a huge fan of him for us. I'd gamble on Maxey's combo of defensive ability and scoring over Hali.

Vassell - This is the guy whose shot is basically the icing. The defence is what you're drafting him for and if he can make even a league average amount of 3s he'll be a key piece on a contending team. I wouldn't draft Maxey over him in any situation.

Terry - I actually really like Terry but there's no way around his physical issues. Hopefully with strength training he can better hold his own defensively and finishing (he already finishes quite well though to be fair), but aside from that his playmaking isn't at the level you want from a PG prospect and the defence, while he's got the IQ, also isn't as good as Maxey's. Like Bane this is a toss up for me between these two, but I'd probably give Maxey the edge because I think he provides enough outside of shooting that if his shot isn't an issue he'd be the better all round player. Terry needs a little more to get there (strength, playmaking, etc) although if he's still growing like he suggested in the ESPN vid...hell, maybe he's a 2 guard and suddenly those playmaking concerns disappear entirely.

And for reference, my read on Maxey is that he's a combo guard on both ends, should be a good defender and contributor on offence with or without his shot. Swing skills are shooting and playmaking, shooting being an easy fix for him (needs to just lift his shot a bit, shoot up rather than out) and playmaking might have been hidden at Kentucky which would give him PG potential. The size limits his finishing and some defensive assignments though (bigger 2s might give him trouble, no chance of guarding 3s). Honestly I wouldn't be surprised if he went as high as 8 to the Knicks and I don't think that would be absurd. In general I think his combination of offensive and defensive abilities push him above a lot of the other guys since whatever he lacks in one area he more than makes up on the other (better offensively than Bane, better defensively than Terry for example).


Thanks for putting in the effort at least to share your thoughts on the other players. Nobody else really has. For the record though, it appears you might have a little Maxey on your chin still. I still don't think you are affording these other players the benefit of doubt you are offering him. He's literally done next to nothing amazing in college. But each paragraph and name there you compared to him suggesting he did something better. I've been looking for examples of what gets a few people so excited about him and I've yet to see much of it. I see a player capable of playing at the college level. Nothing screams he's playing above anyone else there at that level, at least that I've seen yet. Again, you are the first to take a stab at comparing any of the others so good on you.

What benefit of the doubt do you think I should be giving them?

I give non-shooters some leeway, assuming they have indicators that they could improve like FT% and 3PAr, because it's typically a skill that's easiest (not easy and certainly not automatic, but easiest) to improve. When you start getting into other issues, either skill wise like playmaking or defensive awareness or physical tools, they're much harder to grow. If you were to ask me specifically, for example, whether I believe Maxey will improve his shooting or Nesmith will improve his athleticism, I'd always choose Maxey. And you could sub those names out for any other combination of similar prospects, the answer would always be the same.

I should add that I actually like a lot of those other guys as well and that most of them are in a similar tier on my imaginary big board. The only guys I'm not big on are Haliburton, who I think is fool's gold, and Ramsey, who I don't have a great read on but I doubt his shooting given his FT%s. Everyone else is someone I'd be happy if we drafted.

Haliburton's stats appear to good to be true. You're saying they won't translate to the NBA I take it.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1903 » by shangrila » Wed Aug 26, 2020 11:00 pm

KGdaBom wrote:
shangrila wrote:
Jedzz wrote:
Thanks for putting in the effort at least to share your thoughts on the other players. Nobody else really has. For the record though, it appears you might have a little Maxey on your chin still. I still don't think you are affording these other players the benefit of doubt you are offering him. He's literally done next to nothing amazing in college. But each paragraph and name there you compared to him suggesting he did something better. I've been looking for examples of what gets a few people so excited about him and I've yet to see much of it. I see a player capable of playing at the college level. Nothing screams he's playing above anyone else there at that level, at least that I've seen yet. Again, you are the first to take a stab at comparing any of the others so good on you.

What benefit of the doubt do you think I should be giving them?

I give non-shooters some leeway, assuming they have indicators that they could improve like FT% and 3PAr, because it's typically a skill that's easiest (not easy and certainly not automatic, but easiest) to improve. When you start getting into other issues, either skill wise like playmaking or defensive awareness or physical tools, they're much harder to grow. If you were to ask me specifically, for example, whether I believe Maxey will improve his shooting or Nesmith will improve his athleticism, I'd always choose Maxey. And you could sub those names out for any other combination of similar prospects, the answer would always be the same.

I should add that I actually like a lot of those other guys as well and that most of them are in a similar tier on my imaginary big board. The only guys I'm not big on are Haliburton, who I think is fool's gold, and Ramsey, who I don't have a great read on but I doubt his shooting given his FT%s. Everyone else is someone I'd be happy if we drafted.

Haliburton's stats appear to good to be true. You're saying they won't translate to the NBA I take it.

He's got a little too much to improve to become a good player in my mind. He's reminding me of Lonzo Ball as a prospect.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1904 » by KGdaBom » Wed Aug 26, 2020 11:12 pm

shangrila wrote:
KGdaBom wrote:
shangrila wrote:What benefit of the doubt do you think I should be giving them?

I give non-shooters some leeway, assuming they have indicators that they could improve like FT% and 3PAr, because it's typically a skill that's easiest (not easy and certainly not automatic, but easiest) to improve. When you start getting into other issues, either skill wise like playmaking or defensive awareness or physical tools, they're much harder to grow. If you were to ask me specifically, for example, whether I believe Maxey will improve his shooting or Nesmith will improve his athleticism, I'd always choose Maxey. And you could sub those names out for any other combination of similar prospects, the answer would always be the same.

I should add that I actually like a lot of those other guys as well and that most of them are in a similar tier on my imaginary big board. The only guys I'm not big on are Haliburton, who I think is fool's gold, and Ramsey, who I don't have a great read on but I doubt his shooting given his FT%s. Everyone else is someone I'd be happy if we drafted.

Haliburton's stats appear to good to be true. You're saying they won't translate to the NBA I take it.

He's got a little too much to improve to become a good player in my mind. He's reminding me of Lonzo Ball as a prospect.

Yeah I hear that. His stats look like Steve Nash 2.0, but his game isn't as good as his stats appear.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1905 » by Jedzz » Thu Aug 27, 2020 1:31 am

shangrila wrote:
shangrila wrote:What benefit of the doubt do you think I should be giving them?

I give non-shooters some leeway, assuming they have indicators that they could improve like FT% and 3PAr, because it's typically a skill that's easiest (not easy and certainly not automatic, but easiest) to improve. When you start getting into other issues, either skill wise like playmaking or defensive awareness or physical tools, they're much harder to grow. If you were to ask me specifically, for example, whether I believe Maxey will improve his shooting or Nesmith will improve his athleticism, I'd always choose Maxey. And you could sub those names out for any other combination of similar prospects, the answer would always be the same.

I should add that I actually like a lot of those other guys as well and that most of them are in a similar tier on my imaginary big board. The only guys I'm not big on are Haliburton, who I think is fool's gold, and Ramsey, who I don't have a great read on but I doubt his shooting given his FT%s. Everyone else is someone I'd be happy if we drafted.

Haliburton's stats appear to good to be true. You're saying they won't translate to the NBA I take it.

He's got a little too much to improve to become a good player in my mind. He's reminding me of Lonzo Ball as a prospect.

I think we need to see there ends up a distinction between the players that can start fast in the NBA using certain skills they already have and a high bbiq to carry them at least passable early, and the players that take 2 to 5 seasons before they really spin up because they translated differently and weren't capable of using enough BBIQ, confidence and or a SHOT to produce for their team early. Way too many variables both for the individual and for the team they join and their development process in order to claim we can really see which players will or won't instantly charge onto the court and impress and which ones will need time. Maybe teams with direct access to them might be able to run telling tests on them if at all.

Lonzo Ball showed good improvement this season and could be coming around, accept of course that FT%. Now we have a previously written-off Fultz sparking in Orlando and getting noticed out of the blue. Slo starters doesn't necessarily mean never I guess. But I don't know how anyone can claim that of college prospects which they will be. I see you trying a bit or maybe you aren't trying to discern this.

I like seeing interviews at this stage.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1906 » by jpatrick » Thu Aug 27, 2020 2:10 am

Halliburton is definitely not Nash 2.0. Lonzo Ball, the current player, is actually a good comp. He shot the ball well in college but has question marks whether it will translate, as his form is really odd with a low release that could be bothered by NBA length. However, the real troubling part is that he has no ability to beat defenders 1-on-1. I heard a stat today that he only had something like 8 attempts at the rim in half court possessions this season. He is an excellent decision maker though.

All-in-all, if his defense translates, I see his upside as current Lonzo, who is a very good role player but only a role player.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1907 » by Jedzz » Thu Aug 27, 2020 3:52 am

jpatrick wrote:Halliburton is definitely not Nash 2.0. Lonzo Ball, the current player, is actually a good comp. He shot the ball well in college but has question marks whether it will translate, as his form is really odd with a low release that could be bothered by NBA length. However, the real troubling part is that he has no ability to beat defenders 1-on-1. I heard a stat today that he only had something like 8 attempts at the rim in half court possessions this season. He is an excellent decision maker though.

All-in-all, if his defense translates, I see his upside as current Lonzo, who is a very good role player but only a role player.
That could be possible. But I think his ceiling might be higher if that strange but consistent shot continues and somehow works the same at the next level. i think his bbiq might be more useful to him early. I think he's adding mass lately or that's the claim anyway. We'll see if he's transforming at all but he's got a frame with room to do so. And one thing he doesn't seem to have the same problem with as Lonzo is a FT shot. There is that question though, will he be drawing any fouls.

Haliburton's 3s I think will work in the NBA if he's picking his shots when open and otherwise moving the ball. He seems to have all the range he needs without much leg power needed. He takes some deep shots and his form doesn't change. He doesn't dip harder, he's not using a sweep/sway, he's not a jumper. But whether off pass or off his own dribble it looks identical everytime and it's a straight righthand set. He does do a quick twichy dip and there is some wrist flick in there like Lonzo's tend to look like. But he's not a right hander setting the ball left of his face like Lonzo. Nothing like that. He's not tuning his hip toward he basket like Nash, nothing like that. I'm guessing he's just not going to be skying over players, pausing in mid air, and then letting it fly like a Lavine. He's going to get these shots off quick and they are going to go in. Just like his FTs. That is if is new team doesn't try to turn him into a jumper with the ball over his head and kicking his feet out "to gain more power" as if they need him shooting from half court.

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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1908 » by minimus » Thu Aug 27, 2020 11:09 am

Xavier Tillman was blessed to play with the best passer in college basketball, Cassius Winston, but he was no slouch with the ball in his hands either. Tillman was effective at getting the ball at the wing or top of the key, and attacking the paint with one or two dribbles, and hitting a shooter perfectly for three.


I think this was one of the reasons why Tillman is developed into an elite passer. For a big playing next to a good passing PG can help to become a better passer. I remember that Karl Malone was not a good passer at the beginning of his NBA careerб but playing many years with Stockton helped Karl to become a good passer. Getting a perfect assist from your PG allows you to have a little advantage over opponent defense, gives you the momentum to attack, break defense further. This short rolls element of offense might be something very useful for us, because just like GSW we don't have elite slashers like Harden or Westbrook. Beasley just like Klay Thompson is not an advanced ballhandler. GSW used short rolls and Dray Green passing ability to create elite team offense, based on passing and constant off-ball movement. That is why I want us to draft Tillman. Because he might be the missing piece to build our identity. Elite finisher at rim, passer and defender, solid rebounder, screener.

One note though. I believe that he is not PF for small ball. I think in MIN system he will play at 5 in offense and will share duties with KAT as big man in drop scheme. Call me crazy, but based on MIN fit, I rank him over Wiseman and OO.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1909 » by Klomp » Thu Aug 27, 2020 11:30 am

minimus wrote:One note though. I believe that he is not PF for small ball. I think in MIN system he will play at 5 in offense and will share duties with KAT as big man in drop scheme.

I tend to agree. I think Tillman would play the 5 role here.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1910 » by minimus » Thu Aug 27, 2020 11:42 am

Klomp wrote:
minimus wrote:One note though. I believe that he is not PF for small ball. I think in MIN system he will play at 5 in offense and will share duties with KAT as big man in drop scheme.

I tend to agree. I think Tillman would play the 5 role here.


So some MIN fans who are advocating for twin tower lineup will rejoice.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1911 » by Klomp » Thu Aug 27, 2020 12:23 pm

Jedzz wrote:
shangrila wrote:
Jedzz wrote:Perhaps you could expound on what makes Maxey more of a prospect for the NBA, and especially this team, than any of the names such as Desmond Bane, J Ramsey, Haliburton, Vassel, Tyrell Terry, and others that literally have proven a better shooter and are not garbage players outside of their shot. I mean I'm looking for some substance here to explain this. Why must we always be looking at players for this team that "must develop a shot"?

If the responses are just, "Nesmith doesn't cut it" I'm just going to have to pass on further dicussing this. Because I've never even typed his name until just now. There are plenty others and you haven't even given Nesmith the benefit of doubt that you are affording Maxey or these top 3 guys in the draft.

Nesmith was just an example. Probably an extreme one, I'll admit, given his physical limitations compared to others and that his game is only shooting. I mean, specifically with Nesmith, his defence is average at absolute best, his playmaking is below average and he doesn't have much burst and/or skill to create off the dribble. I do think he could be a 40+% 3pt shooter in the league with excellent off ball movement so that's where his value comes from but his defence stacked against Maxey's is seriously lacking.

I think there's been some miscommunication here as well. I'm not advocating for us to draft Maxey per se (I'd take him at 17 but wouldn't move up to get him). My original talk was about Edwards. I just included Maxey because he, like Edwards, didn't shoot the ball well percentage-wise but is widely considered to be a better shooter than that based on form and FT%.

If you're asking for breakdowns of those specific prospects in terms of what might be holding them back or how they stack up to Maxey, I can give it a go;

Bane - Is old, which always depresses stock (I don't agree with it, but it is what it is). He's also apparently got a "negative" wingspan; 6-4 to his 6-6 height. This might affect his abilities defensively. Otherwise though he's a great prospect and should have a 10 year career, but I do think he caps out as a role player. Just doesn't quite have the burst/athleticism to be a high level shot creator IMO. That said I wouldn't be upset if we took him at 17 and if for some ungodly reason he's there at 33 and Rosas doesn't take him I'll personally fly to Minny and slap the man. But compared to Maxey...eh, that's tough. I like both of their defensive abilities and think Maxey has more individual scoring ability but Bane has the better potential to just slot into a lineup. I think it's a toss up between them for me.

Ramsey - I haven't watched much of him, so take what I say with a grain of salt. I've seen people say he's a good defender but I don't see it and his skills outside of shooting seem rudimentary at best. Add to that he's only got a 64% FT and I worry that his shot might actually be fool's gold (3PAs suggest otherwise so it could go either way honestly). But if he can't shoot I'm not sure he provides enough otherwise. Maxey at least brings it defensively and does well moving off screens and the like to still contribute offensively so I'd give him the nod. That said, I probably do need to watch more of Ramsey.

Haliburton - Can't create for himself, can't finish with his frame, too skinny on both ends. He's a smart player but if his shot doesn't translate, which is a legit concern, then he's going to have serious issues offensively. Considering how funky his shot is and that it doesn't translate at all to off the bounce shots I'm thinking more and more that it will end up being an issue for the first few years at least. Considering our timeline, and added to his strength issues that affect both ends, I'm not a huge fan of him for us. I'd gamble on Maxey's combo of defensive ability and scoring over Hali.

Vassell - This is the guy whose shot is basically the icing. The defence is what you're drafting him for and if he can make even a league average amount of 3s he'll be a key piece on a contending team. I wouldn't draft Maxey over him in any situation.

Terry - I actually really like Terry but there's no way around his physical issues. Hopefully with strength training he can better hold his own defensively and finishing (he already finishes quite well though to be fair), but aside from that his playmaking isn't at the level you want from a PG prospect and the defence, while he's got the IQ, also isn't as good as Maxey's. Like Bane this is a toss up for me between these two, but I'd probably give Maxey the edge because I think he provides enough outside of shooting that if his shot isn't an issue he'd be the better all round player. Terry needs a little more to get there (strength, playmaking, etc) although if he's still growing like he suggested in the ESPN vid...hell, maybe he's a 2 guard and suddenly those playmaking concerns disappear entirely.

And for reference, my read on Maxey is that he's a combo guard on both ends, should be a good defender and contributor on offence with or without his shot. Swing skills are shooting and playmaking, shooting being an easy fix for him (needs to just lift his shot a bit, shoot up rather than out) and playmaking might have been hidden at Kentucky which would give him PG potential. The size limits his finishing and some defensive assignments though (bigger 2s might give him trouble, no chance of guarding 3s). Honestly I wouldn't be surprised if he went as high as 8 to the Knicks and I don't think that would be absurd. In general I think his combination of offensive and defensive abilities push him above a lot of the other guys since whatever he lacks in one area he more than makes up on the other (better offensively than Bane, better defensively than Terry for example).


Thanks for putting in the effort at least to share your thoughts on the other players. Nobody else really has. For the record though, it appears you might have a little Maxey on your chin still. I still don't think you are affording these other players the benefit of doubt you are offering him. He's literally done next to nothing amazing in college. But each paragraph and name there you compared to him suggesting he did something better. I've been looking for examples of what gets a few people so excited about him and I've yet to see much of it. I see a player capable of playing at the college level. Nothing screams he's playing above anyone else there at that level, at least that I've seen yet. Again, you are the first to take a stab at comparing any of the others so good on you.

Player B spends two years in college, shooting 35% and 32% from 3-point range. Gets to the NBA and shoots above 30% from long range in just six of 16 seasons at SG.

Knowing that in hindsight, do you instead draft Player A - the combo guard who is the same height as Player B, who shot 40% from 3s in three of four college seasons, who went on to be a career 37% 3-point shooter with six of his 13 NBA seasons at or above 39%?

Spoiler:
Player A: Kirk Hinrich (7th pick in 2003)
Player B: Dwyane Wade (5th pick in 2003)


My point isn't to say that any prospect in this draft is Player A or Player B. I'm just saying draft prospect evaluation is hard. We can count on players to improve areas, but it doesn't always happen. However, doesn't necessarily doom that player for NBA failure either. We like to focus on 3-point shooting. But there's far more to being an NBA player than that one category.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1912 » by thinktank » Thu Aug 27, 2020 12:51 pm

Klomp wrote:
Jedzz wrote:
shangrila wrote:Nesmith was just an example. Probably an extreme one, I'll admit, given his physical limitations compared to others and that his game is only shooting. I mean, specifically with Nesmith, his defence is average at absolute best, his playmaking is below average and he doesn't have much burst and/or skill to create off the dribble. I do think he could be a 40+% 3pt shooter in the league with excellent off ball movement so that's where his value comes from but his defence stacked against Maxey's is seriously lacking.

I think there's been some miscommunication here as well. I'm not advocating for us to draft Maxey per se (I'd take him at 17 but wouldn't move up to get him). My original talk was about Edwards. I just included Maxey because he, like Edwards, didn't shoot the ball well percentage-wise but is widely considered to be a better shooter than that based on form and FT%.

If you're asking for breakdowns of those specific prospects in terms of what might be holding them back or how they stack up to Maxey, I can give it a go;

Bane - Is old, which always depresses stock (I don't agree with it, but it is what it is). He's also apparently got a "negative" wingspan; 6-4 to his 6-6 height. This might affect his abilities defensively. Otherwise though he's a great prospect and should have a 10 year career, but I do think he caps out as a role player. Just doesn't quite have the burst/athleticism to be a high level shot creator IMO. That said I wouldn't be upset if we took him at 17 and if for some ungodly reason he's there at 33 and Rosas doesn't take him I'll personally fly to Minny and slap the man. But compared to Maxey...eh, that's tough. I like both of their defensive abilities and think Maxey has more individual scoring ability but Bane has the better potential to just slot into a lineup. I think it's a toss up between them for me.

Ramsey - I haven't watched much of him, so take what I say with a grain of salt. I've seen people say he's a good defender but I don't see it and his skills outside of shooting seem rudimentary at best. Add to that he's only got a 64% FT and I worry that his shot might actually be fool's gold (3PAs suggest otherwise so it could go either way honestly). But if he can't shoot I'm not sure he provides enough otherwise. Maxey at least brings it defensively and does well moving off screens and the like to still contribute offensively so I'd give him the nod. That said, I probably do need to watch more of Ramsey.

Haliburton - Can't create for himself, can't finish with his frame, too skinny on both ends. He's a smart player but if his shot doesn't translate, which is a legit concern, then he's going to have serious issues offensively. Considering how funky his shot is and that it doesn't translate at all to off the bounce shots I'm thinking more and more that it will end up being an issue for the first few years at least. Considering our timeline, and added to his strength issues that affect both ends, I'm not a huge fan of him for us. I'd gamble on Maxey's combo of defensive ability and scoring over Hali.

Vassell - This is the guy whose shot is basically the icing. The defence is what you're drafting him for and if he can make even a league average amount of 3s he'll be a key piece on a contending team. I wouldn't draft Maxey over him in any situation.

Terry - I actually really like Terry but there's no way around his physical issues. Hopefully with strength training he can better hold his own defensively and finishing (he already finishes quite well though to be fair), but aside from that his playmaking isn't at the level you want from a PG prospect and the defence, while he's got the IQ, also isn't as good as Maxey's. Like Bane this is a toss up for me between these two, but I'd probably give Maxey the edge because I think he provides enough outside of shooting that if his shot isn't an issue he'd be the better all round player. Terry needs a little more to get there (strength, playmaking, etc) although if he's still growing like he suggested in the ESPN vid...hell, maybe he's a 2 guard and suddenly those playmaking concerns disappear entirely.

And for reference, my read on Maxey is that he's a combo guard on both ends, should be a good defender and contributor on offence with or without his shot. Swing skills are shooting and playmaking, shooting being an easy fix for him (needs to just lift his shot a bit, shoot up rather than out) and playmaking might have been hidden at Kentucky which would give him PG potential. The size limits his finishing and some defensive assignments though (bigger 2s might give him trouble, no chance of guarding 3s). Honestly I wouldn't be surprised if he went as high as 8 to the Knicks and I don't think that would be absurd. In general I think his combination of offensive and defensive abilities push him above a lot of the other guys since whatever he lacks in one area he more than makes up on the other (better offensively than Bane, better defensively than Terry for example).


Thanks for putting in the effort at least to share your thoughts on the other players. Nobody else really has. For the record though, it appears you might have a little Maxey on your chin still. I still don't think you are affording these other players the benefit of doubt you are offering him. He's literally done next to nothing amazing in college. But each paragraph and name there you compared to him suggesting he did something better. I've been looking for examples of what gets a few people so excited about him and I've yet to see much of it. I see a player capable of playing at the college level. Nothing screams he's playing above anyone else there at that level, at least that I've seen yet. Again, you are the first to take a stab at comparing any of the others so good on you.

Player B spends two years in college, shooting 35% and 32% from 3-point range. Gets to the NBA and shoots above 30% from long range in just six of 16 seasons at SG.

Knowing that in hindsight, do you instead draft Player A - the combo guard who is the same height as Player B, who shot 40% from 3s in three of four college seasons, who went on to be a career 37% 3-point shooter with six of his 13 NBA seasons at or above 39%?

Spoiler:
Player A: Kirk Hinrich (7th pick in 2003)
Player B: Dwyane Wade (5th pick in 2003)


My point isn't to say that any prospect in this draft is Player A or Player B. I'm just saying draft prospect evaluation is hard. We can count on players to improve areas, but it doesn't always happen. However, doesn't necessarily doom that player for NBA failure either. We like to focus on 3-point shooting. But there's far more to being an NBA player than that one category.


What a weird example to use.

Three point shooting is a lot more important now than it was during Wade’s career.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1913 » by Klomp » Thu Aug 27, 2020 12:56 pm

thinktank wrote:What a weird example to use.

Three point shooting is a lot more important now than it was during Wade’s career.

His career ended one season ago.

So much different.....
tsherkin wrote:The important thing to take away here is that Klomp is wrong.
Esohny wrote:Why are you asking Klomp? "He's" actually a bot that posts random blurbs from a database.
Klomp wrote:I'm putting the tired in retired mod at the moment
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1914 » by KGdaBom » Thu Aug 27, 2020 1:01 pm

Klomp wrote:
Jedzz wrote:
shangrila wrote:Nesmith was just an example. Probably an extreme one, I'll admit, given his physical limitations compared to others and that his game is only shooting. I mean, specifically with Nesmith, his defence is average at absolute best, his playmaking is below average and he doesn't have much burst and/or skill to create off the dribble. I do think he could be a 40+% 3pt shooter in the league with excellent off ball movement so that's where his value comes from but his defence stacked against Maxey's is seriously lacking.

I think there's been some miscommunication here as well. I'm not advocating for us to draft Maxey per se (I'd take him at 17 but wouldn't move up to get him). My original talk was about Edwards. I just included Maxey because he, like Edwards, didn't shoot the ball well percentage-wise but is widely considered to be a better shooter than that based on form and FT%.

If you're asking for breakdowns of those specific prospects in terms of what might be holding them back or how they stack up to Maxey, I can give it a go;

Bane - Is old, which always depresses stock (I don't agree with it, but it is what it is). He's also apparently got a "negative" wingspan; 6-4 to his 6-6 height. This might affect his abilities defensively. Otherwise though he's a great prospect and should have a 10 year career, but I do think he caps out as a role player. Just doesn't quite have the burst/athleticism to be a high level shot creator IMO. That said I wouldn't be upset if we took him at 17 and if for some ungodly reason he's there at 33 and Rosas doesn't take him I'll personally fly to Minny and slap the man. But compared to Maxey...eh, that's tough. I like both of their defensive abilities and think Maxey has more individual scoring ability but Bane has the better potential to just slot into a lineup. I think it's a toss up between them for me.

Ramsey - I haven't watched much of him, so take what I say with a grain of salt. I've seen people say he's a good defender but I don't see it and his skills outside of shooting seem rudimentary at best. Add to that he's only got a 64% FT and I worry that his shot might actually be fool's gold (3PAs suggest otherwise so it could go either way honestly). But if he can't shoot I'm not sure he provides enough otherwise. Maxey at least brings it defensively and does well moving off screens and the like to still contribute offensively so I'd give him the nod. That said, I probably do need to watch more of Ramsey.

Haliburton - Can't create for himself, can't finish with his frame, too skinny on both ends. He's a smart player but if his shot doesn't translate, which is a legit concern, then he's going to have serious issues offensively. Considering how funky his shot is and that it doesn't translate at all to off the bounce shots I'm thinking more and more that it will end up being an issue for the first few years at least. Considering our timeline, and added to his strength issues that affect both ends, I'm not a huge fan of him for us. I'd gamble on Maxey's combo of defensive ability and scoring over Hali.

Vassell - This is the guy whose shot is basically the icing. The defence is what you're drafting him for and if he can make even a league average amount of 3s he'll be a key piece on a contending team. I wouldn't draft Maxey over him in any situation.

Terry - I actually really like Terry but there's no way around his physical issues. Hopefully with strength training he can better hold his own defensively and finishing (he already finishes quite well though to be fair), but aside from that his playmaking isn't at the level you want from a PG prospect and the defence, while he's got the IQ, also isn't as good as Maxey's. Like Bane this is a toss up for me between these two, but I'd probably give Maxey the edge because I think he provides enough outside of shooting that if his shot isn't an issue he'd be the better all round player. Terry needs a little more to get there (strength, playmaking, etc) although if he's still growing like he suggested in the ESPN vid...hell, maybe he's a 2 guard and suddenly those playmaking concerns disappear entirely.

And for reference, my read on Maxey is that he's a combo guard on both ends, should be a good defender and contributor on offence with or without his shot. Swing skills are shooting and playmaking, shooting being an easy fix for him (needs to just lift his shot a bit, shoot up rather than out) and playmaking might have been hidden at Kentucky which would give him PG potential. The size limits his finishing and some defensive assignments though (bigger 2s might give him trouble, no chance of guarding 3s). Honestly I wouldn't be surprised if he went as high as 8 to the Knicks and I don't think that would be absurd. In general I think his combination of offensive and defensive abilities push him above a lot of the other guys since whatever he lacks in one area he more than makes up on the other (better offensively than Bane, better defensively than Terry for example).


Thanks for putting in the effort at least to share your thoughts on the other players. Nobody else really has. For the record though, it appears you might have a little Maxey on your chin still. I still don't think you are affording these other players the benefit of doubt you are offering him. He's literally done next to nothing amazing in college. But each paragraph and name there you compared to him suggesting he did something better. I've been looking for examples of what gets a few people so excited about him and I've yet to see much of it. I see a player capable of playing at the college level. Nothing screams he's playing above anyone else there at that level, at least that I've seen yet. Again, you are the first to take a stab at comparing any of the others so good on you.

Player B spends two years in college, shooting 35% and 32% from 3-point range. Gets to the NBA and shoots above 30% from long range in just six of 16 seasons at SG.

Knowing that in hindsight, do you instead draft Player A - the combo guard who is the same height as Player B, who shot 40% from 3s in three of four college seasons, who went on to be a career 37% 3-point shooter with six of his 13 NBA seasons at or above 39%?

Spoiler:
Player A: Kirk Hinrich (7th pick in 2003)
Player B: Dwyane Wade (5th pick in 2003)


My point isn't to say that any prospect in this draft is Player A or Player B. I'm just saying draft prospect evaluation is hard. We can count on players to improve areas, but it doesn't always happen. However, doesn't necessarily doom that player for NBA failure either. We like to focus on 3-point shooting. But there's far more to being an NBA player than that one category.

I've been saying that forever and getting abused for saying so.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1915 » by TheProdigy » Thu Aug 27, 2020 1:13 pm

Klomp wrote:
thinktank wrote:What a weird example to use.

Three point shooting is a lot more important now than it was during Wade’s career.

His career ended one season ago.

So much different.....

Wade was at the peak of his career about 10-15 years ago. The league has drastically changed since then.

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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1916 » by KGdaBom » Thu Aug 27, 2020 1:17 pm

TheProdigy wrote:
Klomp wrote:
thinktank wrote:What a weird example to use.

Three point shooting is a lot more important now than it was during Wade’s career.

His career ended one season ago.

So much different.....

Wade was at the peak of his career about 10-15 years ago. The league has drastically changed since then.

Image

Yep. Wade, in his prime, would be a total liability now. :o :lol:
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1917 » by TheProdigy » Thu Aug 27, 2020 1:25 pm

KGdaBom wrote:
TheProdigy wrote:
Klomp wrote:His career ended one season ago.

So much different.....

Wade was at the peak of his career about 10-15 years ago. The league has drastically changed since then.

Image

Yep. Wade, in his prime, would be a total liability now. :o :lol:

I didn't come remotely close to saying that.

I don't think I'm the first person to mention it's difficult having conversations with you. Everything is black or white, one extreme or the other with you...
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1918 » by KGdaBom » Thu Aug 27, 2020 1:26 pm

TheProdigy wrote:
KGdaBom wrote:
TheProdigy wrote:Wade was at the peak of his career about 10-15 years ago. The league has drastically changed since then.

Image

Yep. Wade, in his prime, would be a total liability now. :o :lol:

I didn't come remotely close to saying that.

I don't think I'm the first person to mention it's difficult having conversations with you. Everything is black or white, one extreme or the other with you...

I know you didn't say that.
It was just a joke. Have a sense of humor.
I'm about the furthest person away from everything being black and white on this board. I'm open to Edwards being #1 overall despite his horrific college shooting that I hate.
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1919 » by TheProdigy » Thu Aug 27, 2020 1:34 pm

KGdaBom wrote:
TheProdigy wrote:
KGdaBom wrote:Yep. Wade, in his prime, would be a total liability now. :o :lol:

I didn't come remotely close to saying that.

I don't think I'm the first person to mention it's difficult having conversations with you. Everything is black or white, one extreme or the other with you...

I know you didn't say that.
It was just a joke. Have a sense of humor.
I'm about the furthest person away from everything being black and white on this board. I'm open to Edwards being #1 overall despite his horrific college shooting that I hate.

Image
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Re: 2020 NBA Draft prospects 

Post#1920 » by KGdaBom » Thu Aug 27, 2020 1:36 pm

TheProdigy wrote:
KGdaBom wrote:
TheProdigy wrote:I didn't come remotely close to saying that.

I don't think I'm the first person to mention it's difficult having conversations with you. Everything is black or white, one extreme or the other with you...

I know you didn't say that.
It was just a joke. Have a sense of humor.
I'm about the furthest person away from everything being black and white on this board. I'm open to Edwards being #1 overall despite his horrific college shooting that I hate.

Image

Ok that's a start. :lol:

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