Troubadour wrote:baulderdash77 wrote:DH is right. Payton has nice defensive potential but let's remember he played in the Sun Belt, not a major conference. Furthermore he has the very worst shooting and very worst TO% of any player in the entire draft.
Teams will press him early in the clock and try to make him make bad passes, then they will sag off him and dare him to shoot. On a pick and roll everyone will go under and hope he shoots. He can't even shoot FT's! It's a big IF that he will be able to go from worst shooter in the draft to NBA quality as a shooter.
I did a search of players who have his shooting #'s and his TO #'s in college basketball history. Guess what- you've never heard of any of them.
At #20 I really hope we have better options than a PG who can't shoot and who turns the ball over that much.
He has some nice skills but some of the holes in his game are so serious for a PG that he's almost a non prospect.
Damian Lillard played in a small conference, too. Paul George played at Fresno State.
The raw ability doesn't change conference to conference. Payton projects to be an elite perimeter defender.
I actually addressed that fact and mentioned that I like small conference stars more than most usually. One of the things I often like about them is that they are typically double-teamed more so they're used to pressure. However, what I want to see is something elite that will translate from the jump to the next level. Lillard had his shooting to go along with his incredible physical tools. Lillard scored at a high volume on a 62% TS%! High volume scoring on that kind of a true shooting can translate and did somewhat translate because Lillard backed that shooting up with good size, speed, leaping ability and bball IQ for the position. Heck, I was making the case for Lillard at 8 in that draft back when he was projected to go past 15. Heck, I compared him to a poor man's Kyrie and projected his rookie PER to within a point. I know Lillard. I also know why he transitioned better to the pros than the last dominant prospect from the Big Sky did (Rodney Stuckey).
Payton's TS% the past couple years was 53 and 54%. He's a guy with some intriguing physical tools and talent that does some things at a good level but nothing at an elite level. Even defence, which is his probably the one thing that could keep him on the floor over all the other hungry, talented, cheap backup PGs out there, is still just an upside possibility rather than sowmthing to feel confident about. The defensive potential is there but will he embrace it? I saw far more defensive upside in Avery Bradley and wasn't at all surprised when he became an eite defensive pest.
Again, I like aspects of him as a prospect. Getting a guy a little like Brandon Knight with the 20th pick in the draft isn't anything to laugh off. I just hope we can do better and I think the reasons he's ranked where he is is fair given some of the question marks surrounding him. I don't even think he's that specialy athletically, if I'm honest. If he was a little more special in that way I would be more intrigued by him as a potential long-term investment but I'm hoping we can do better. He seems like a guy who will need to bounce around to a couple teams and find the right situation to reach his potential.