Duke4life831 wrote:jman3134 wrote:clyde21 wrote:tournament performances are almost irrelevant tbh to overall prospect status, like you just said, Mobley and Barnes were bad by their standards in the tourney last yr, it didn't matter.
a team of Zion, Tre Jones, RJ Barrett and Cam Reddish lost in the S16. Deandre Ayton was a 1AD in the tourney and was terrible. guys like Ben Simmons and Antman didn't even make the tournament.
great tournament performances for top prospects barely exist anymore. who were the last ones? Justise Winslow and Anthony Davis?
Don't agree with you here on the NCAA tournament not having significance. Mobley's shot changing ability was extremely evident all tournament long. It was game changing and the reason they destroyed Iowa.
Obviously, the whole of the season is important, but with these freshman guards, the NCAA tournament is most important in gauging their development curve. It isn't a matter of the shooter missing shots and suddenly now he's a bad shooter. It is a look into the progression of the freshman and how ready he is to make that leap.
Jaden Ivey made the jump last year. The knock on Ben Simmons coming in was LSU's team performance and the fact that they were never able to get over the hump - valid or not.
Of course, a major point about this is how the freshman is utilized within their college system. If it is a point guard running the show and his team completely collapses due to inept play, it is more significant than a big (who is guard dependent) having a quiet performance.
Kennedy Chandler was ok against Michigan. The rest of his team did not step up. So context is also important, but the NCAA tournament is the most significant gauge of a freshman prospect (esp guards) with the exception of the combine.
For me, the NCAA tournament is one of the biggest mental gauges moreso than the actual performance. How does a player (and team) respond with his back against the wall? Is he an alpha? Does he have stones like Ben Mathurin?
With Mobley it was already well known prior to the tournament that his defense was elite. I mean he was the PAC 12 DPOY entering the tournament for a reason.
I don't agree that the tournament is the best gauge. The best gauge is seeing how they performed in conference play (if they play in a power conference). There you get see how they react to a normal grind of a season, they consistently go against teams with legit size and athleticism, and against legit coaches that know how to scout and game plan and go up against the same teams multiple times.
Don't get me wrong I'm not saying the tournament means nothing. I think there is still wiggle room to adjust guys up and down your board during this time.
But I don't think any major adjustments should be based off of the tournament.
Yes, of course we knew that about Mobley. But, USC's surprising team performance was largely a result of that D in action against marquee opponents. And we are human, so that tends to move the needle when comping Mobley vs. a Kuminga or Jalen Green for instance. If I'm evaluating Mobley, I'd rather see him against Gonzaga than UCLA twice. In conference play, you can figure teams out and know what you are going to get from opponents. That is why the NCAA is important - because you often have to adapt to different playstyles. If you are in the Big 10, can you run with an SEC opponent? Style contrasts are important. Also, how does the prospect adjust to being matched up with a new opponent? The evaluation is predominantly psychological, but it clearly has an impact with NBA scouts (seeing how many guys move up and down the draft boards after NCAA performances), and with good reason.
For me, I use the whole season to gauge who a prospect is from a tendencies perspective: strength, weaknesses, etc. The NCAA tournament often tells me how those strengths and weaknesses hold up under intense playing conditions. The two games in two days tournament style format is more indicative of how life will be in the NBA with back to backs etc.