2018 NBA Draft

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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#481 » by Duke4life831 » Wed Aug 23, 2017 1:15 am

Lalouie wrote:
Duke4life831 wrote:There are two elite prospects in this draft Ayton and Bamba. Many of the recruiting gurus are already considering Bamba the better Prospect and 2 years from now I think Bamba will be the way choice. 6'11 with a 7'9 wingspan and a 9'6 standing reach. Elite defender and shot blocker, very good athlete for his size. He is now starting to put on muscle. Also has great hands and a good shooting touch.


I'm usually way down on centers because the true impact ones are once in a generation - the odds are just not there. Plus the game is getting away from the paint


I agree but I think these two guys are some of the exceptions. A defensive big like Gobert is still extremely valuable in todays game. I personally feel like Bamba has that kind of defensive potential. Ayton to me has KAT like potential. The dude can score in so many different ways and can really rebound the ball. A big that can rebound and score from inside and on the outside I still feel like has a place in todays game. Neither guy are low post plodders like say an Okafor.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#482 » by clyde21 » Wed Aug 23, 2017 3:15 am

Absolutely in love with Bamba. Would be my choice for #1 pick right now, with Bagley and Carter second and third.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#483 » by Kolkmania » Wed Aug 23, 2017 11:43 am

The-Power wrote:
Kolkmania wrote:
The-Power wrote:Since the two of us seem to be the Troy Brown bandwagoners on this board: what's your take on Jaren Jackson (the other player I'm clearly higher on than most)?


I like his defense and his length. He's really young and seems like a smart kid, so let's see how he'll progress throughout the year. His release point is a bit low, not really skilled and he's athletic abilities seems a bit underwhelming to me so I don't think he'll be able create his own shot, seems more of a role player to me. But honestly I haven't seen enough of him to form a real opinion about him, curious how he'll perform next to Bridges this year.

What makes you so optimistic about him?

It's true that Jackson is unlikely to be more than a role player on the offensive end. But given that big men rarely are top-tier offensive anchors anyway, I tend to put much more emphasis on defense. That being said, I believe Jackson can be a solid offensive contributer. First and foremost, he can shoot 3's despite his unusual mechanics which gives him more offensive versatility and portability. He's not an impressive athlete nor is he impressively skilled even for a big man; but with his decent touch and length he should be able to exploit mismatches after switches in the post down the road. Furthermore, he is unselfish, understands the game and is going to keep the ball moving. In other words: I see an opportunistic scorer who's willing to defer and focus on how he can contribute on offense (taking open shots, setting screens, the occasional lob and post-up after switches, offensive rebounding).

What makes him a great talent is his defensive upside. In my opinion, he's the second best defensive prospect in the draft behind Bamba. Jackson is very long and fluid (which allows him to defend outside the paint), he knows how to position himself on defense and is willing to fight for rebounds (more than Bamba at this point). He should be a good shot blocker who can play both positions at the next level. The combination of potentially great modern (!) big men defense and a great offensive skill set for a role player (ability to shoot, rebound, post up against guards and defer) make him a really intriguing prospect in my eyes. If he's ever going to become a second-tier DPOY candidate – e.g. someone like Millsap on that end – then I'm positive that there aren't more than four guys better than him in the draft, especially considering that he should fit in anywhere and make an impact. Obviously it's not easy to become this good defensively but aside from the generational defensive prospect in Bamba his odds to become a top 5-10 defensive player in the league are as good as anybody else's in next year's draft.


Interesting. How are his feet at the perimeter, defending quicker guards? I don't mind that he's not a scoring option on the offensive end if he's capable of making some threes and pass out of short rolls and stuff like that, but if defense is his primary skill he'd better be really good at it to warrant a top pick.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#484 » by Kolkmania » Wed Aug 23, 2017 11:57 am

Duke4life831 wrote:
Spoiler:
Kolkmania wrote:
Duke4life831 wrote:
I think you would be in the vast minority on Carter and Brown over Ayton and Bagley. Not saying youre wrong just curious why so high on those two and low on the other two.
Marcus wrote:
why low on those two?


It's a matter of personal preferences and things I'm looking for in terms of "scouting" prospects. I value BB IQ over potential based on athleticism for instance. Let me state that I get the intrigue of Ayton and Bagley and absolutely agree with their ceiling outcome as franchise players in the NBA if everything falls into place. I just find it very unlikely that they hit those ceilings, for different reasons. In high school players who are physically overwhelming have a incredible advantage, you can't fault them for having so, but I do look for development throughout the years in the skills and mental part of the game. And I feel that both players have been roughly the same players for some time now.

Ayton has been a monster in high school for several years at this point, but when I watch a full game of him he still runs into spots where he doesn't belong, he doesn't play any defense, his motor is abysmal and his body language is even worse. Could he average 20 PPG in the NBA? Sure. But what is the value of a high usage big who doesn't have the mindset nor the IQ to play defense in the modern NBA?

Bagley is intriguing because of his mobility while being 6'10'', but besides that he's a jack of all trades, master of none. His jumper looks smooth, but his percentages are just horrible and I think he just doesn't posses the touch to convert. You don't want him to be a primary creator as well, he can't dribble in half court situations and his decision making is just very poor. For every nice dish he'll turn the ball over two times. So offensively he's a energy big with some limited dribbling abilities for me.
Defensively he's far better, but also a bit overrated for me. I've seen some games where he was absolutely dominant, he has the mentality to contest every shot around the basket, but he doesn't have the frame nor reach to consistently force misses against NBA athletes. Aside from that he's a great rebounder.
I'm higher on Bagley than Ayton and I'll place him in the same tier as Wendell Carter and Troy Brown, but he has to show me he's more than an energy big with defensive versatility to put him in the conversation for the #1 pick.

Regarding the two prospects I'm higher on than the consensus. I feel that Wendell Carter is criminally underrated. He's not extremely long, but he has the reach of a center and unlike Bagley he has the frame to absorb contact at the rim. Apart from that he's just so much smarter from a positional perspective than Ayton for example, despite being shorter and less athletic I remember him outplaying him under the boards and from a scoring perspective as well. His handle is really good for a big as well making him capable passing from the short roll.
Troy Brown's archetype is just really valuable in the NBA. He's a wing who's comfortable operating as a secondary or tertiary playmaker. He's such a willing passer in transition (loves to make quick passes like Lonzo Ball) and he rarely makes the wrong decision. Combine that with a nearly 7 foot wingspan, willingess to defend, good looking shooting motion and he's exactly what you want from a modern NBA player.


I cant really disagree with any of this. I do think Troy Brown is getting close to being criminally underrated. The dude is not even on a bunch of mock drafts. He does lack the explosion so he does lack some flash to his game, but ya the dude is really skilled and is a swiss army knife. A lot of his game depends on if his jumper gets more consistent, right now its pretty inconsistent but he does have good form. Ive got him around 8-10 on my board but I can see why you got him that high.

Im not as high on Ayton as others, I know some people have him as their top guy. I cant deny his potential, the dude is huge and has crazy potential on both sides of the ball. But he does have big time question marks when it comes to his work ethic and consistency. I dont like how often he seems to just disappear during games. Hes almost like the big man version of Wiggins for me. Has all the physical tools you could ask for from his position, there is just no reason for him to disappear as often as he has.

I also agree with you on Bagley that he is a jack of all trades and master of none right now. I will say the mixture of his athleticism, motor and rebounding is pretty close to elite in my opinion. But I think a lot of his potential is based on his jumper becoming legit. Right now its inconsistent but he has good form on it so I can see the potential there. To me his ceiling is just so high its hard to pass up.

Youre also preaching to the choir when it comes to Wendell Carter. His size is his big question mark but his measurements arent all that far off from Demarcus Cousins (height and wingspan), Demarcus does have a nice advantage when it comes to standing reach. His game is very well rounded and I can see him being a stronger and more athletic Al Horford but a much better rebounder. Hes a good defender and pretty damn skilled offensively for his age, his jumper is pretty solid to about 18ft and clearly has a ton of potential to reach the 3pt line and his passing skills are really good.

So I can definitely see what you see with those guys. I think Brown and especially Carter are really safe bets to be damn good players. But I think the ceilings for Bagley, Porter, Bamba and Ayton are just much higher. So I can definitely see a team going for them over Carter/Brown to take the chance on their high potential. But I definitely get where youre coming from and its hard to argue your points.


There's always the incredibly complex deliberation between betting on a players upside or choosing for the player with a higher median outcome. Let alone trying to predict each players ceiling and outcome. There's also the team factor, teams like Philly have their prospects to build around and don't need to gamble on the unlikely ceiling outcome of a prospect like Orlando Magic should do for instance.
So despite the praise of you guys I'm not confident about my assessments and ranking of these prospects haha.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#485 » by Marcus » Wed Aug 23, 2017 3:46 pm

reanimator wrote:
Read on Twitter


was he the kid that picked that super small school to play ball at this year?
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#486 » by Marcus » Wed Aug 23, 2017 3:57 pm

Lalouie wrote:
Duke4life831 wrote:There are two elite prospects in this draft Ayton and Bamba. Many of the recruiting gurus are already considering Bamba the better Prospect and 2 years from now I think Bamba will be the way choice. 6'11 with a 7'9 wingspan and a 9'6 standing reach. Elite defender and shot blocker, very good athlete for his size. He is now starting to put on muscle. Also has great hands and a good shooting touch.


I'm usually way down on centers because the true impact ones are once in a generation - the odds are just not there. Plus the game is getting away from the paint


don't be so fooled by the direction the game is taking. End of the day the league is still about size. A lot of the bigs in the league are adding range in a form of adaptation to the current climate which is a trickle down effect to the amateur ranks of basketball right now. The big man is back en-vogue in the league and they've added lil guy skills to the toolset. These prospects along with the recent influx of young bigs in the league aren't your average "can only bang in the paint" type of bigs. We're ushering in a new era and the 5 as a position is increasing in depth.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#487 » by reanimator » Wed Aug 23, 2017 5:08 pm

Marcus wrote:
reanimator wrote:
Read on Twitter


was he the kid that picked that super small school to play ball at this year?


Yep

Western Kentucky hired his family to get him then fired his family once he got on campus thinking he would just accept it.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#488 » by Marcus » Wed Aug 23, 2017 5:59 pm

reanimator wrote:
Marcus wrote:
reanimator wrote:
Read on Twitter


was he the kid that picked that super small school to play ball at this year?


Yep

Western Kentucky hired his family to get him then fired his family once he got on campus thinking he would just accept it.


ahhh. that makes sense then. my next question was going to be what happened there but you beat me to it. So he's ineligible to play anywhere else if he wants to make it to the 2018 draft. So this makes sense I guess unless he plays overseas for a year. I wonder who he's going to be working out with. I'm assuming he isn't old enough to sign a G-League deal but I really do think this is a case for where Silver should look into things like this and give a kid a chance in a situation like this.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#489 » by No-Man » Wed Aug 23, 2017 6:32 pm

You can sign in the GLeague whenever, he wont do that tho cause it only can hurt him, risk of injury or disappointing clearly outweighs the little money he could make.

There is enough athletic promise with him that he will get drafted in the 1st round unless he interviews poorly, he can signed with an agent and get a whole year of training+getting ready for those, getting coached, an agency will treat him well and cover for him due to how highly regarded he is.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#490 » by Duke4life831 » Wed Aug 23, 2017 6:41 pm

Marcus wrote:
reanimator wrote:
Marcus wrote:
was he the kid that picked that super small school to play ball at this year?


Yep

Western Kentucky hired his family to get him then fired his family once he got on campus thinking he would just accept it.


ahhh. that makes sense then. my next question was going to be what happened there but you beat me to it. So he's ineligible to play anywhere else if he wants to make it to the 2018 draft. So this makes sense I guess unless he plays overseas for a year. I wonder who he's going to be working out with. I'm assuming he isn't old enough to sign a G-League deal but I really do think this is a case for where Silver should look into things like this and give a kid a chance in a situation like this.


Oh hes definitely old enough for the G League. Its not the same as the NBA, the only requirement is you have to be 18 by the end of the year. So basically everyone who graduates high school is eligible to go straight to the G League. Plus Robinson is really old for the class, hes going to be 20 next April.

This just shows the G League is not even on the radar for guys like Robinson. I believe the G League still has 2 salary tiers for guys not with NBA contracts. I believe the tiers are 19k and 25k. Thats basically minimum wage. So Im sure Robinson's agent or whoever will pay him to workout the entire year and he will make more money than the G League would give him while not being stuck with the horrible G League schedule and travel.

I still think there is an easy fix for the age thing with the NBA. Keep the age requirement as it is, but allow teams to draft players and stash them in the G League until theyre old enough for the NBA. The players could get paid right out of high school and the G League would start to get a ton of big names coming through the league every year.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#491 » by Lalouie » Wed Aug 23, 2017 6:47 pm

Marcus wrote:
Lalouie wrote:
Duke4life831 wrote:There are two elite prospects in this draft Ayton and Bamba. Many of the recruiting gurus are already considering Bamba the better Prospect and 2 years from now I think Bamba will be the way choice. 6'11 with a 7'9 wingspan and a 9'6 standing reach. Elite defender and shot blocker, very good athlete for his size. He is now starting to put on muscle. Also has great hands and a good shooting touch.


I'm usually way down on centers because the true impact ones are once in a generation - the odds are just not there. Plus the game is getting away from the paint


don't be so fooled by the direction the game is taking. End of the day the league is still about size. A lot of the bigs in the league are adding range in a form of adaptation to the current climate which is a trickle down effect to the amateur ranks of basketball right now. The big man is back en-vogue in the league and they've added lil guy skills to the toolset. These prospects along with the recent influx of young bigs in the league aren't your average "can only bang in the paint" type of bigs. We're ushering in a new era and the 5 as a position is increasing in depth.



Every defensive big drafted for his D has had to develop an offense and the last big who made a difference was Shaq. They're just bad odds to make a difference imo
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#492 » by Duke4life831 » Wed Aug 23, 2017 7:00 pm

Lalouie wrote:
Marcus wrote:
Lalouie wrote:
I'm usually way down on centers because the true impact ones are once in a generation - the odds are just not there. Plus the game is getting away from the paint


don't be so fooled by the direction the game is taking. End of the day the league is still about size. A lot of the bigs in the league are adding range in a form of adaptation to the current climate which is a trickle down effect to the amateur ranks of basketball right now. The big man is back en-vogue in the league and they've added lil guy skills to the toolset. These prospects along with the recent influx of young bigs in the league aren't your average "can only bang in the paint" type of bigs. We're ushering in a new era and the 5 as a position is increasing in depth.



Every defensive big drafted for his D has had to develop an offense and the last big who made a difference was Shaq. They're just bad odds to make a difference imo


Gobert doesnt make a difference? That dude was a game changer for Utah last year. Dwight didnt make a difference in Orlando? Orlando was a top contender in the East for a long time and made it to the finals with Dwight being the only person close to being a star on that team.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#493 » by JamesConway » Wed Aug 23, 2017 7:18 pm

What do you guys think of Bruce Brown? What's his upside/draft range/position in the NBA? Do you think he can play alongside someone like Dennis Smith going forward?
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#494 » by Marcus » Wed Aug 23, 2017 8:03 pm

Lalouie wrote:
Marcus wrote:
Lalouie wrote:
I'm usually way down on centers because the true impact ones are once in a generation - the odds are just not there. Plus the game is getting away from the paint


don't be so fooled by the direction the game is taking. End of the day the league is still about size. A lot of the bigs in the league are adding range in a form of adaptation to the current climate which is a trickle down effect to the amateur ranks of basketball right now. The big man is back en-vogue in the league and they've added lil guy skills to the toolset. These prospects along with the recent influx of young bigs in the league aren't your average "can only bang in the paint" type of bigs. We're ushering in a new era and the 5 as a position is increasing in depth.



Every defensive big drafted for his D has had to develop an offense and the last big who made a difference was Shaq. They're just bad odds to make a difference imo


You can make the once in a generation argument for every position though can't you? Same thing with last rookie to make the kind of difference you're referring to in general was what? Bron? What position does actually have that kind of impact?
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#495 » by The-Power » Wed Aug 23, 2017 9:49 pm

Kolkmania wrote:Interesting. How are his feet at the perimeter, defending quicker guards? I don't mind that he's not a scoring option on the offensive end if he's capable of making some threes and pass out of short rolls and stuff like that, but if defense is his primary skill he'd better be really good at it to warrant a top pick.

He's mobile and reasonably quick for his size. Combined with his length and smarts when it comes to defense I expect him to be able to stay with and contest quicker Guards at the perimeter on switches down the road. He's certainly not only your traditional rim protector. How good he can be in this regard against top-tier competition remains to be seen, next year at MSU we'll get a better idea of his potential.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#496 » by Catchall » Thu Aug 24, 2017 9:46 pm

Lalouie wrote:
Marcus wrote:
Lalouie wrote:
I'm usually way down on centers because the true impact ones are once in a generation - the odds are just not there. Plus the game is getting away from the paint


don't be so fooled by the direction the game is taking. End of the day the league is still about size. A lot of the bigs in the league are adding range in a form of adaptation to the current climate which is a trickle down effect to the amateur ranks of basketball right now. The big man is back en-vogue in the league and they've added lil guy skills to the toolset. These prospects along with the recent influx of young bigs in the league aren't your average "can only bang in the paint" type of bigs. We're ushering in a new era and the 5 as a position is increasing in depth.



Every defensive big drafted for his D has had to develop an offense and the last big who made a difference was Shaq. They're just bad odds to make a difference imo


There's a stout list of defensive centers who make a real difference --- Chandler, DAJ, Gobert, Whiteside, etc.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#497 » by Marcus » Thu Aug 24, 2017 11:54 pm

Don't know a ton about him and since we won't get a chance to see him this season in the NCAA, somebody sell me on Mitchell Robinson. I can see from clips he's a freak athlete for his size but what's the skillset like? I can see a shot blocker, fluid athlete, good length, we're obviously gonna get an idea of his work ethic and passion since he's essentially working out for a year before hitting the league. What separates the rest of the pack from what Mitchell can bring a NBA team?
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#498 » by Marcus » Fri Aug 25, 2017 12:03 am

Duke4life831 wrote:
Marcus wrote:
reanimator wrote:
Yep

Western Kentucky hired his family to get him then fired his family once he got on campus thinking he would just accept it.


ahhh. that makes sense then. my next question was going to be what happened there but you beat me to it. So he's ineligible to play anywhere else if he wants to make it to the 2018 draft. So this makes sense I guess unless he plays overseas for a year. I wonder who he's going to be working out with. I'm assuming he isn't old enough to sign a G-League deal but I really do think this is a case for where Silver should look into things like this and give a kid a chance in a situation like this.


Oh hes definitely old enough for the G League. Its not the same as the NBA, the only requirement is you have to be 18 by the end of the year. So basically everyone who graduates high school is eligible to go straight to the G League. Plus Robinson is really old for the class, hes going to be 20 next April.

This just shows the G League is not even on the radar for guys like Robinson. I believe the G League still has 2 salary tiers for guys not with NBA contracts. I believe the tiers are 19k and 25k. Thats basically minimum wage. So Im sure Robinson's agent or whoever will pay him to workout the entire year and he will make more money than the G League would give him while not being stuck with the horrible G League schedule and travel.

I still think there is an easy fix for the age thing with the NBA. Keep the age requirement as it is, but allow teams to draft players and stash them in the G League until theyre old enough for the NBA. The players could get paid right out of high school and the G League would start to get a ton of big names coming through the league every year.


With your scenario do you see elite level HS talents being willing to wait out that year in the G-League instead of college? Lets say they have the grades and pick from any elite level program and are on the radar for top 3 whenever they decide to leave for the draft how many do you think make the decision to G-League it up over college?

Also, and this is all based on my intrigue with your idea. With the age limit still intact, are we allowing some of our older kids to jump as soon as they are of age? So in the case of someone like Robinson and say Luka Doncic, or better yet this past season where we have a kid like Fultz and then a Josh Jackson. In your scenario if they both declared would Josh be eligible for the main roster due to age while Fultz plays G-League until he's old enough?
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#499 » by Duke4life831 » Fri Aug 25, 2017 6:33 am

Marcus wrote:
Duke4life831 wrote:
Marcus wrote:
ahhh. that makes sense then. my next question was going to be what happened there but you beat me to it. So he's ineligible to play anywhere else if he wants to make it to the 2018 draft. So this makes sense I guess unless he plays overseas for a year. I wonder who he's going to be working out with. I'm assuming he isn't old enough to sign a G-League deal but I really do think this is a case for where Silver should look into things like this and give a kid a chance in a situation like this.


Oh hes definitely old enough for the G League. Its not the same as the NBA, the only requirement is you have to be 18 by the end of the year. So basically everyone who graduates high school is eligible to go straight to the G League. Plus Robinson is really old for the class, hes going to be 20 next April.

This just shows the G League is not even on the radar for guys like Robinson. I believe the G League still has 2 salary tiers for guys not with NBA contracts. I believe the tiers are 19k and 25k. Thats basically minimum wage. So Im sure Robinson's agent or whoever will pay him to workout the entire year and he will make more money than the G League would give him while not being stuck with the horrible G League schedule and travel.

I still think there is an easy fix for the age thing with the NBA. Keep the age requirement as it is, but allow teams to draft players and stash them in the G League until theyre old enough for the NBA. The players could get paid right out of high school and the G League would start to get a ton of big names coming through the league every year.


With your scenario do you see elite level HS talents being willing to wait out that year in the G-League instead of college? Lets say they have the grades and pick from any elite level program and are on the radar for top 3 whenever they decide to leave for the draft how many do you think make the decision to G-League it up over college?

Also, and this is all based on my intrigue with your idea. With the age limit still intact, are we allowing some of our older kids to jump as soon as they are of age? So in the case of someone like Robinson and say Luka Doncic, or better yet this past season where we have a kid like Fultz and then a Josh Jackson. In your scenario if they both declared would Josh be eligible for the main roster due to age while Fultz plays G-League until he's old enough?


I think the top tier players would definitely think about it if enough money was involved. Say age ineligible players who are drafted could get payed up to 500k for the 1 year they play in the G League and it wont count against the salary cap for that year the team drafted him, after that 1 year and they become age eligible their normal NBA contract kicks in.

I think 500K for 1 year in the G League might be enough for top tier players to think about that option over college for a year. This way it keeps the NBA from looking like a development league, it begins to legitimize the G League with more legit star power and the star power is being paid by the NBA teams so it wouldnt bankrupt the G League. It also gives elite players coming right out of high school a domestic professional option that pays very well.

I dont think the NBA would have to change their age rule. Right now it is you have to turn 19 by the end of that draft year and you must be at least 1 year removed from high school. So keep the eligibility rules the same, it just gives the OAD players another domestic option to spend their 1 year after high school.

So Josh and Markelle both would be eligible because the eligibility rules are the same. This past year's draft just couldve involved guys like Bagley, Porter, Ayton and so on as well. But those guys wouldnt be eligible to play in the NBA their first year either because of age or because they just graduated high school (only a few weeks before the draft). They would get drafted, get the G League 500k contract then after the 1 year in the G League their NBA rookie contract kicks in and they join the NBA team that drafted them.
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Re: 2018 NBA Draft 

Post#500 » by Bob8 » Fri Aug 25, 2017 7:54 am

Marcus wrote:
Duke4life831 wrote:
Marcus wrote:
ahhh. that makes sense then. my next question was going to be what happened there but you beat me to it. So he's ineligible to play anywhere else if he wants to make it to the 2018 draft. So this makes sense I guess unless he plays overseas for a year. I wonder who he's going to be working out with. I'm assuming he isn't old enough to sign a G-League deal but I really do think this is a case for where Silver should look into things like this and give a kid a chance in a situation like this.


Oh hes definitely old enough for the G League. Its not the same as the NBA, the only requirement is you have to be 18 by the end of the year. So basically everyone who graduates high school is eligible to go straight to the G League. Plus Robinson is really old for the class, hes going to be 20 next April.

This just shows the G League is not even on the radar for guys like Robinson. I believe the G League still has 2 salary tiers for guys not with NBA contracts. I believe the tiers are 19k and 25k. Thats basically minimum wage. So Im sure Robinson's agent or whoever will pay him to workout the entire year and he will make more money than the G League would give him while not being stuck with the horrible G League schedule and travel.

I still think there is an easy fix for the age thing with the NBA. Keep the age requirement as it is, but allow teams to draft players and stash them in the G League until theyre old enough for the NBA. The players could get paid right out of high school and the G League would start to get a ton of big names coming through the league every year.


With your scenario do you see elite level HS talents being willing to wait out that year in the G-League instead of college? Lets say they have the grades and pick from any elite level program and are on the radar for top 3 whenever they decide to leave for the draft how many do you think make the decision to G-League it up over college?

Also, and this is all based on my intrigue with your idea. With the age limit still intact, are we allowing some of our older kids to jump as soon as they are of age? So in the case of someone like Robinson and say Luka Doncic, or better yet this past season where we have a kid like Fultz and then a Josh Jackson. In your scenario if they both declared would Josh be eligible for the main roster due to age while Fultz plays G-League until he's old enough?


I don't know if Doncic is right example because he can get 2+ million per year easily, if he decides to stay in Real few more years. So G-league makes no sense for him.

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