ciueli wrote:There are players who came into the NBA fairly raw and turned into superstars with development. Giannis, Kawhi, Butler, Tatum, Gobert, it's not uncommon for players with fantastic physicals to be something special at the next level even if they don't have the skill part of the game down yet.
It ever happens. That said, a lot of those guys had certain skills already which were just underutilized. Also, Gobert isn't a superstar, and blows chunks at anything that isn't spoon-fed to him on offense, so he isn't a particularly salient example for the sake of offense. Of course, he developed as a defender, for sure.
Giannis developed. He had elite physical tools, including raw size, and by his second season at the latest you could see where his arc was likely taking him. Kawhi was an elite defender with high-end physical tools who had a pretty reasonable jumper to start with. He probably would have looked different on any team other than the Spurs early, too. But San Antonio had their O in place and had him develop a little more slowly. Tatum had physical tools and shooting ability right from the word go. Butler hit the league in the lockout year as the 30th overall pick, and got 8.5 mpg as a rookie, and even then you could see his ability to draw contact and the foul. All-Defensive by his 3rd season. Took him a while to figure out offense because he wasn't much of a shooter but he also sorted himself out at the FT line in atypical fashion. He's been an 85% FT shooter from his 4th season onward.
Anyway, these guys are exceptions more than the rule. And we should be learning our lesson a little: it's okay to look for skilled guys who aren't elite athletes as well. Not "instead of," but additionally. We've been seeing for some time that those guys can have impact in today's game. Drafting athletes who aren't skilled is one route, for sure, but it would be really nice to have guys who could already play.
I think by the time the back part of the draft rolls around there is more value in undersized but skilled players that other teams pass over, we've seen Masai draft undersized guys or "normal" size players with late first round, second round picks, or even undrafted and do well there, but that's mostly an acknowledgement that the later draft picks are more likely to be fringe starter or bench level types where size and physicals aren't as important to expectations.
Yeah, especially later in the draft, that approach makes a lot of sense, for sure. But late in the first round and into the second round, that's the time for reaches and experiments, right? Your EV on those picks is totally different than for a top 10 pick, so it makes a lot of sense to just screw around and try stuff.











