2022 NBA Draft

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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2021 » by clyde21 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 2:22 am

jman3134 wrote:Proving a negative is a frivolous pursuit - that the NCAA tournament is NOT weighed when evaluating prospects. To do this, I would have to have every team's draft board pre tournament. Or we can look at ESPN's as a proxy (assuming they actually are doing their jobs and talking to scouts, which I'm not sure about) and see Mathurin move into the top 10 (which to be fair to you should have happened pre tournament anyway). Somehow my argument is being strawmanned as "NBA prospect A became a prospect because of his unblemished NCAA tournament performance and eventual national championship." That is a far different statement than "these games don't matter."

I'll just note that all these NCAA tournament games are irrelevant and Ben Mathurin and Ivey will not jump into your top 5-7. ;)

Don't really have a need to prove any of this to you because players like Davion Mitchell getting drafted #9 overall last year (not 2007) mean this is an obvious part of the process for better or for worse.


i don't think it's weighted at all for blue chip prospects, specifically for FS/Soph, it's approached differently for upperclassmen but that's a different discussion entirely.

again, we have a history of proving NO correlation between tournament success and NBA success.

Deandre Ayton laid a monstrous egg in his 1 tournament game - still went #1 overall, meanwhile Bagley averaged 21/8 and shot 70% over 4 games and went 2nd, and guess who's been better in the NBA? didn't matter for scouts and definitely didn't matter in the NBA.

not sure how many cases I have to throw out here to disprove this logic.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2022 » by clyde21 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 2:25 am

jman3134 wrote:
clyde21 wrote:Mobley played worse across the board in the tournament, both his raw numbers and efficiency stats all went down - what did that tell you exactly about him as a prospect?


It told me that he is an elite defensive prospect with an underrated offensive game - pretty much the same things that I learned from the regular season. But, watching him do it against the number 1 team in college basketball and against Kansas (while also making sound offensive decisions getting his teammates involved) elevated him in my mind relative to Cade.

To be clear, a prospect does not suddenly become a prospect from the NCAA tournament. A prospect can elevate his standing relative to other prospects by performing well. Because 30 games is a pretty small sample size, every game does matter. And games against the best teams/styles, which can expose weaknesses/limitations, are the most relevant.


sure - if two prospects are DEAD EVEN and one has historic tournament and the other struggles that'll make a difference. rarely it's that black and white tho and context always has to be infused, and clearly there is very little correlation between tournament success and success in the NBA.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2023 » by clyde21 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 2:42 am

list of last 20 most outstanding players in the tourney:

Jared Butler
Kyle Guy
Donte DiVincenzo
Joel Berry
Ryan Arcidiacono
Tyus Jones
Shabazz Napier
Luke Hancock
Anthony Davis
Kemba Walker
Kyle Singler
Wayne Ellington
Mario Chalmers
Corey Brewer
Joakim Noah
Sean May
Emeka Okafor
Carmelo Anthony
Juan Dixon
Shane Battier

again, 0 correlation here.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2024 » by azcatz11 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 2:55 am

clyde21 wrote:list of last 20 most outstanding players in the tourney:

Jared Butler
Kyle Guy
Donte DiVincenzo
Joel Berry
Ryan Arcidiacono
Tyus Jones
Shabazz Napier
Luke Hancock
Anthony Davis
Kemba Walker
Kyle Singler
Wayne Ellington
Mario Chalmers
Corey Brewer
Joakim Noah
Sean May
Emeka Okafor
Carmelo Anthony
Juan Dixon
Shane Battier

again, 0 correlation here.


I had to google Luke Hancock :lol: :lol:
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2025 » by Big J » Tue Mar 22, 2022 3:40 am

clyde21 wrote:list of last 20 most outstanding players in the tourney:

Jared Butler
Kyle Guy
Donte DiVincenzo
Joel Berry
Ryan Arcidiacono
Tyus Jones
Shabazz Napier
Luke Hancock
Anthony Davis
Kemba Walker
Kyle Singler
Wayne Ellington
Mario Chalmers
Corey Brewer
Joakim Noah
Sean May
Emeka Okafor
Carmelo Anthony
Juan Dixon
Shane Battier

again, 0 correlation here.


Lol at trying to prove your point using MOP in a vacuum.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2026 » by Roger Murdock » Tue Mar 22, 2022 3:55 am

clyde21 wrote:list of last 20 most outstanding players in the tourney:

Jared Butler
Kyle Guy
Donte DiVincenzo
Joel Berry
Ryan Arcidiacono
Tyus Jones
Shabazz Napier
Luke Hancock
Anthony Davis
Kemba Walker
Kyle Singler
Wayne Ellington
Mario Chalmers
Corey Brewer
Joakim Noah
Sean May
Emeka Okafor
Carmelo Anthony
Juan Dixon
Shane Battier

again, 0 correlation here.


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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2027 » by Roger Murdock » Tue Mar 22, 2022 3:56 am

Roger Murdock wrote:
clyde21 wrote:list of last 20 most outstanding players in the tourney:

Jared Butler
Kyle Guy
Donte DiVincenzo
Joel Berry
Ryan Arcidiacono
Tyus Jones
Shabazz Napier
Luke Hancock
Anthony Davis
Kemba Walker
Kyle Singler
Wayne Ellington
Mario Chalmers
Corey Brewer
Joakim Noah
Sean May
Emeka Okafor
Carmelo Anthony
Juan Dixon
Shane Battier

again, 0 correlation here.


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My bad I miss read thought you were saying these were your 20 most impressive
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2028 » by crows2 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 4:41 am

clyde21 wrote:
jman3134 wrote:
clyde21 wrote:you know who had a really good tournament? Jarrett Culver.

glad he's setting the league on fire right now.


Ja Morant, Derrick Rose, Mikal Bridges, Jalen Brunson, and Jayson Tatum say hi.


Morant shot 38% in an L out of the tournament.


Not really interested in this argument but trying to infer that Morant was poor in the tourney is laughable. Anyone that watched him play could plainly see he was a level above the competition there and was going to be a handful in the NBA. He just had so much time compared to every other player, and it was important to see that against better competition than he faced throughout the year.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2029 » by clyde21 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 5:00 am

crows2 wrote:
clyde21 wrote:
jman3134 wrote:
Ja Morant, Derrick Rose, Mikal Bridges, Jalen Brunson, and Jayson Tatum say hi.


Morant shot 38% in an L out of the tournament.


Not really interested in this argument but trying to infer that Morant was poor in the tourney is laughable. Anyone that watched him play could plainly see he was a level above the competition there and was going to be a handful in the NBA. He just had so much time compared to every other player, and it was important to see that against better competition than he faced throughout the year.


the point isn't that Ja was terrible, the point is that we've consistently seen players underperform to expectations in the tourney and didn't matter long term in terms of their prospects in the NBA

Morant shots 50% in the reg season, shot 38% in an L in the tourney...to me that didn't matter, but check his player thread here, to a lot of people it did when it shouldn't have - that's the point
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2030 » by clyde21 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 5:03 am

Big J wrote:
clyde21 wrote:list of last 20 most outstanding players in the tourney:

Jared Butler
Kyle Guy
Donte DiVincenzo
Joel Berry
Ryan Arcidiacono
Tyus Jones
Shabazz Napier
Luke Hancock
Anthony Davis
Kemba Walker
Kyle Singler
Wayne Ellington
Mario Chalmers
Corey Brewer
Joakim Noah
Sean May
Emeka Okafor
Carmelo Anthony
Juan Dixon
Shane Battier

again, 0 correlation here.


Lol at trying to prove your point using MOP in a vacuum.


im trying to prove there is 0 correlation between tournament success and NBA success...you're more than welcome to provide a single data point that there is.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2031 » by jman3134 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 5:19 am

clyde21 wrote:
jman3134 wrote:Proving a negative is a frivolous pursuit - that the NCAA tournament is NOT weighed when evaluating prospects. To do this, I would have to have every team's draft board pre tournament. Or we can look at ESPN's as a proxy (assuming they actually are doing their jobs and talking to scouts, which I'm not sure about) and see Mathurin move into the top 10 (which to be fair to you should have happened pre tournament anyway). Somehow my argument is being strawmanned as "NBA prospect A became a prospect because of his unblemished NCAA tournament performance and eventual national championship." That is a far different statement than "these games don't matter."

I'll just note that all these NCAA tournament games are irrelevant and Ben Mathurin and Ivey will not jump into your top 5-7. ;)

Don't really have a need to prove any of this to you because players like Davion Mitchell getting drafted #9 overall last year (not 2007) mean this is an obvious part of the process for better or for worse.


i don't think it's weighted at all for blue chip prospects, specifically for FS/Soph, it's approached differently for upperclassmen but that's a different discussion entirely.

again, we have a history of proving NO correlation between tournament success and NBA success.

Deandre Ayton laid a monstrous egg in his 1 tournament game - still went #1 overall, meanwhile Bagley averaged 21/8 and shot 70% over 4 games and went 2nd, and guess who's been better in the NBA? didn't matter for scouts and definitely didn't matter in the NBA.

not sure how many cases I have to throw out here to disprove this logic.


I still don't think you see what I am saying. 1 or 2 games do not negate the whole of the overall profile or establish a "new top prospect". The sample size is too small for that. No one is saying that. Nor is anyone saying that it is more important than all regular season games combined. I explained that multiple times.

You cherry picking examples and playing the false equivalency game does next to nothing to dispel what I am saying (because even though you think you are "proving me wrong", we both lack the data concerning where players ranked on NBA teams' draft boards before and after the tournament). Ayton was the surefire number 1 pick before and after a bad game in the tournament. Did his wingspan shrink from 7'6 to 6'7 postgame? And I stated pretty clearly that what I am saying is *most* applicable for guards and wings.

The first statement you made was that it means next to nothing. And now I have you at next to nothing for blue chips. I'll play though. The guys you are citing are the cream of the crop, who you already know what you are getting and the tournament does little for. The NCAA tournament has raised some blue chips over others. Here are some late rising "blue chips" without the projectible profile, who used the tournament to solidify their case.

Here are last years:
Jeremiah Robinson-Earl - definitely did something to solidify himself as an early second round pick. 5 star recruit without the obvious physical advantages/projectible NBA body who had to continue to prove his skillset at the highest stage. Against Baylor, he was efficient but not great. But, he left a solid impression with his overall performance. Probably killed the interviews too because he is mentally head and shoulders more mature and intelligent basketball wise than most of the class.

Joshua Primo - 4 star had a good game against Maryland in the NCAAs in a supporting role. Then he is taken out of his system and kills it at the combine and suddenly he is a high draft pick.

You could also make the case that Jalen Suggs improved his stock considerably in the tournament for him to go over Kuminga, though he was also excellent in the regular season. This is a useless conversation once again because none of us have the draft boards of NBA teams pre tournament to even make this assessment.

Bad overall season, and he also did not play in the tournament - BJ Boston goes from a projected mid-late 1st round pick by most pre tournament to a 2nd rounder come draft time. Same solid physical profile and projectible skillset. I agreed with you that the downgrade was not warranted, but the nature of UK as a dumpster fire team missing the NCAA tournament impacted his stock. For every Anthony Edwards/Ben Simmons whose team stinks and they flash and put up numbers/have obvious projectible skillsets, there is a BJ Boston, who stinks it up during the year and people sour on him. And not showing progression clearly impacted his stock.

And you citing the MOP of the tournament just goes to show that you are not interested in seriously discussing this. That is like throwing out college regular season ppg numbers and then stating, "look how high Tyler Hansbrough and Luka Garza are on this list. Regular season games must be irrelevant for draft stock."
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2032 » by jman3134 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 5:30 am

Why the tournament means something for NBA success - because draft order and getting a guaranteed contract and more opportunities means something for NBA success. It does not change the underlying player (unless again the matchups show you something you didn't see in the regular season- which can happen), but players are afforded more looks when a 1st is spent on you or a higher first in some cases vs. 2nd round or undrafted. You can argue that a first is still a first, but often the difference between an early 2nd and a 1st is so minute that the tournament matters even just because of front office recency bias.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2033 » by jman3134 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 5:41 am

clyde21 wrote:
crows2 wrote:
clyde21 wrote:
Morant shot 38% in an L out of the tournament.


Not really interested in this argument but trying to infer that Morant was poor in the tourney is laughable. Anyone that watched him play could plainly see he was a level above the competition there and was going to be a handful in the NBA. He just had so much time compared to every other player, and it was important to see that against better competition than he faced throughout the year.


the point isn't that Ja was terrible, the point is that we've consistently seen players underperform to expectations in the tourney and didn't matter long term in terms of their prospects in the NBA

Morant shots 50% in the reg season, shot 38% in an L in the tourney...to me that didn't matter, but check his player thread here, to a lot of people it did when it shouldn't have - that's the point


And I am not saying because they sucked that this tanks their draft stock. So I agree that those cases surely happen. Many times the entire regular season is not weighed as heavily for blue chips with projectible profiles. Ziaire Williams last year. And he has done pretty darn well.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2034 » by NO-KG-AI » Tue Mar 22, 2022 6:20 am

The tournament will definitely mean more than some random game in the beginning of the season. If you are of the mind that playing basketball games means anything at all, and I'm assuming we all think it means something, the tournament is definitely the highest level of competition.

You can argue the degree of which it matters, but if you are evaluating a prospect, you'd be lying to yourself if you said that a great tournament game isn't nice to see.

If the tournament means absolutely nothing, then college ball as a whole means nothing and you guys should just roll with your high school rankings, right?
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2035 » by XTC » Tue Mar 22, 2022 9:49 am

The more tape I watch, the more I think AJ Griffin is going to become the prize of the draft. I really can see him becoming a Jimmy Butler/Paul George type player.

I'm a believer of Griffins creation ability. He has all the tools, and I love his tenacity and the way he plays the game.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2036 » by Hal14 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 2:03 pm

clyde21 wrote:
jman3134 wrote:Proving a negative is a frivolous pursuit - that the NCAA tournament is NOT weighed when evaluating prospects. To do this, I would have to have every team's draft board pre tournament. Or we can look at ESPN's as a proxy (assuming they actually are doing their jobs and talking to scouts, which I'm not sure about) and see Mathurin move into the top 10 (which to be fair to you should have happened pre tournament anyway). Somehow my argument is being strawmanned as "NBA prospect A became a prospect because of his unblemished NCAA tournament performance and eventual national championship." That is a far different statement than "these games don't matter."

I'll just note that all these NCAA tournament games are irrelevant and Ben Mathurin and Ivey will not jump into your top 5-7. ;)

Don't really have a need to prove any of this to you because players like Davion Mitchell getting drafted #9 overall last year (not 2007) mean this is an obvious part of the process for better or for worse.


i don't think it's weighted at all for blue chip prospects, specifically for FS/Soph, it's approached differently for upperclassmen but that's a different discussion entirely.

again, we have a history of proving NO correlation between tournament success and NBA success.

Deandre Ayton laid a monstrous egg in his 1 tournament game - still went #1 overall, meanwhile Bagley averaged 21/8 and shot 70% over 4 games and went 2nd, and guess who's been better in the NBA? didn't matter for scouts and definitely didn't matter in the NBA.

not sure how many cases I have to throw out here to disprove this logic.

Carmelo Anthony was pretty good in the NCAA tournament. So was jalen Suggs. Kemba walker, etc.

I'm sure we could go all day pointing out guys who were good in the NCAA tournament but not in the NBA and vice versa..
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2037 » by Hal14 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 2:13 pm

XTC wrote:The more tape I watch, the more I think AJ Griffin is going to become the prize of the draft. I really can see him becoming a Jimmy Butler/Paul George type player.

I'm a believer of Griffins creation ability. He has all the tools, and I love his tenacity and the way he plays the game.

Maybe eventually, down the road, like on his 2nd contract Griffin can get there. But George/Butler are all-NBA level defenders. Griffin is a long ways away from that level defensively - it seems unrealistic to even think he could get there. Has trouble staying in front of guys out on the perimeter sometimes and other times will get beat back door or overhelp which then leaves his man open for a 3.

Offensively, I'm not sure he can be THE go to guy for a good NBA team. Butler was the go to guy on a heat team that made the nba finals, and george was the go to guy on a pacers team that went deep into the playoffs before losing to LeBron. Griffin seems more like a solid complementary piece offensively, like a 3rd or possibly 2nd option.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2038 » by mattao313 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 2:44 pm

XTC wrote:The more tape I watch, the more I think AJ Griffin is going to become the prize of the draft. I really can see him becoming a Jimmy Butler/Paul George type player.

I'm a believer of Griffins creation ability. He has all the tools, and I love his tenacity and the way he plays the game.
Griffin has little vertical athleticism and his foot speed isn't great I see more of a 3&D player. Jimmy Butler and Paul George are pretty athletic all around compared to him.

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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2039 » by clyde21 » Tue Mar 22, 2022 2:57 pm

all this empty talk not a single person able to provide ONE data point proving blue chip success in the NBA has any correlation to tournament play.
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Re: 2022 NBA Draft 

Post#2040 » by SeattleJazzFan » Tue Mar 22, 2022 3:02 pm

well clyde pretty much dominated that argument. granted, he had the winning position the entire time, so he always had the high ground, but he never gave it up.

the biggest reason the NCAA tournament performance is pretty much irrelevant as it relates predicting future success is a simple issue of sample size. anybody (again, other that zion) can have a bad game or even 2 or 3 bad games in a 4 or 5 game stretch. or even 1 or 2 bad games in a 2 game sample.

again, this isn't rocket science - sample size matters. (see what i did there?)

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