2025 NBA Draft Discussion Part 6
Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2025 9:17 pm
Sports is our Business
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https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=2455600
The ball misses more than it makes in that video, but his percentages in the BAL were good for age and position, 32% on 57 attempts. Focus as well on the fluidity, where Maluach is able to keep his balance even when shooting off of some movement. The release is quick and high with a good follow-through. Draft analysts talk about energy transfer and the smoothness from set up to release jumps off the screen.
The key to whether his shot makes or misses is his right foot. The one inconsistency in his form, when he turns it inward too much he loses his distance accuracy. Every time the foot faces relatively direct to the basket, the form is sweet. It is unfortunate how little interest Duke has in developing this part of his game, but the instincts are there. Convincingly.
Khaman Maluach’s bread and butter, however, will be his rim finishing. Maluach is flat-out one of the best lob threats the NCAA has seen. He is 23 for 24 as the roll man finisher at the basket, with his 95% mark surpassing that of all recent big men prospects:
Four major components make Maluach possibly the best recent roll man prospect. First, his standing reach is 9’8”. That is an inch more than Wemby. No more need to contextualize that. Second, his screening is excellent. Maluach has already mastered the art of the moving screen which doesn’t get called. This opens up all the space needed.
Third, Maluach has excellent touch near the basket, able to force the ball in even when he can’t finish the lob. He is 21 for 27 (78%) on layups! Compare that again to our big man comparables: Chet was 71%, Mobley 66%, Lively only 52%. Khaman is always two inches away from the rim when he reaches up and can softly guide the ball in from there.
Last, Maluach is excellent at waiting until the last moment to leap. That is perhaps the most essential rim running trait of all. Much like his shooting technique, his footwork is precise and light, shuffling just as needed before taking off. He is a highly accurate leaper, more important than any max vertical when you are already that tall (though his max vertical is not bad, either)./
Even throughout the season, it is evident Maluach has refined his technique and begun to better anticipate offensive actions. He has always been one of the most vocal players on the defensive side of the court, now clearly locked in with his teammates. Duke’s defense has a ridiculous 86.7 defensive rating when Khaman is on the court, compared to a still elite 90.1 when off. However, their opponents’ rim shooting goes down a sharp 12 percentage points from 57% to 45% when Maluach is on the court, and on lower volume, too (numbers versus top 100 teams only). The supporting cast is elite, but the numbers are what they’re supposed to be for a primary rim-protecting prospect.
With his floor spacing potential, rim finishing superiority, and potential ball skill competency, Maluach’s ceiling as an offensive player is quite high. Due to the variety of ways he can improve, the floor is high, too. If Kristaps Porzingis is the reasonable upside comparison on offense, that puts Khaman as a +2-3 points per 100 offensive player in his peak, in the range of 25th to 50th best offensive player in the league. If the shot really hits and he is able to string together a couple dribbles consistently, we smash through that ceiling.
On defense, Maluach will likely take up primary rim protector duties, perhaps in bench units to begin his career, rather than as a helpside four. He is mobile enough, however, to play next to another big simultaneously (once again, think Porzingis next to Horford). This once again speaks to Maluach’s favorable combination of high ceiling and floor. If the instincts continue to improve at this pace, he will become a highly effective drop defender, even by NBA standards. He might be able to do that while not being taken advantage on switches, either. I don’t think a +1.5-2.0 points per 100 contribution on defense is out of the question, in the range of tenth to thirtieth best defender in the league.
Adding it all up, Maluach could range from a +2 to +6 points per 100 added in his prime. In simpler terms, I cannot rule out All NBA appearances and have a baseline of solid starter.
earthtone wrote:Gonna throw some Maluach love in here. Great piece from Swish Theory which will answer questions for anyone wondering why some people are high on him: https://theswishtheory.com/scouting-reports/khaman-maluach/
On his 3-point shooting potential:The ball misses more than it makes in that video, but his percentages in the BAL were good for age and position, 32% on 57 attempts. Focus as well on the fluidity, where Maluach is able to keep his balance even when shooting off of some movement. The release is quick and high with a good follow-through. Draft analysts talk about energy transfer and the smoothness from set up to release jumps off the screen.
The key to whether his shot makes or misses is his right foot. The one inconsistency in his form, when he turns it inward too much he loses his distance accuracy. Every time the foot faces relatively direct to the basket, the form is sweet. It is unfortunate how little interest Duke has in developing this part of his game, but the instincts are there. Convincingly.
On his At-Rim finishing:Khaman Maluach’s bread and butter, however, will be his rim finishing. Maluach is flat-out one of the best lob threats the NCAA has seen. He is 23 for 24 as the roll man finisher at the basket, with his 95% mark surpassing that of all recent big men prospects:
Four major components make Maluach possibly the best recent roll man prospect. First, his standing reach is 9’8”. That is an inch more than Wemby. No more need to contextualize that. Second, his screening is excellent. Maluach has already mastered the art of the moving screen which doesn’t get called. This opens up all the space needed.
Third, Maluach has excellent touch near the basket, able to force the ball in even when he can’t finish the lob. He is 21 for 27 (78%) on layups! Compare that again to our big man comparables: Chet was 71%, Mobley 66%, Lively only 52%. Khaman is always two inches away from the rim when he reaches up and can softly guide the ball in from there.
Last, Maluach is excellent at waiting until the last moment to leap. That is perhaps the most essential rim running trait of all. Much like his shooting technique, his footwork is precise and light, shuffling just as needed before taking off. He is a highly accurate leaper, more important than any max vertical when you are already that tall (though his max vertical is not bad, either)./
On his defense:Even throughout the season, it is evident Maluach has refined his technique and begun to better anticipate offensive actions. He has always been one of the most vocal players on the defensive side of the court, now clearly locked in with his teammates. Duke’s defense has a ridiculous 86.7 defensive rating when Khaman is on the court, compared to a still elite 90.1 when off. However, their opponents’ rim shooting goes down a sharp 12 percentage points from 57% to 45% when Maluach is on the court, and on lower volume, too (numbers versus top 100 teams only). The supporting cast is elite, but the numbers are what they’re supposed to be for a primary rim-protecting prospect.
Overall Final AnalysisWith his floor spacing potential, rim finishing superiority, and potential ball skill competency, Maluach’s ceiling as an offensive player is quite high. Due to the variety of ways he can improve, the floor is high, too. If Kristaps Porzingis is the reasonable upside comparison on offense, that puts Khaman as a +2-3 points per 100 offensive player in his peak, in the range of 25th to 50th best offensive player in the league. If the shot really hits and he is able to string together a couple dribbles consistently, we smash through that ceiling.
On defense, Maluach will likely take up primary rim protector duties, perhaps in bench units to begin his career, rather than as a helpside four. He is mobile enough, however, to play next to another big simultaneously (once again, think Porzingis next to Horford). This once again speaks to Maluach’s favorable combination of high ceiling and floor. If the instincts continue to improve at this pace, he will become a highly effective drop defender, even by NBA standards. He might be able to do that while not being taken advantage on switches, either. I don’t think a +1.5-2.0 points per 100 contribution on defense is out of the question, in the range of tenth to thirtieth best defender in the league.
Adding it all up, Maluach could range from a +2 to +6 points per 100 added in his prime. In simpler terms, I cannot rule out All NBA appearances and have a baseline of solid starter.
Have him #3 on my big board & I think he'll rise throughout the pre-draft process and end up as a Top 5 selection come draft day (depending on how the lotto shakes out)
NotMyKawhi wrote:Win the lottery or use the pick to trade for a star. Ja, giannis, jokic, sabonis, dame, tre. Gotta get a better #1
mtcan wrote:NotMyKawhi wrote:Win the lottery or use the pick to trade for a star. Ja, giannis, jokic, sabonis, dame, tre. Gotta get a better #1
Ja...I don't trust him. His behaviour on and off court is just too erratic. Not worth the headache.
Giannis...yes
Jokic...yes
Sabonis...I don't love him as a center...too small. I think people that pick everyone apart because they aren't 2-way players will rip him to shreds.
Dame...he's old and makes too much money
Tre...see my comment above about the defence
Only 2 potentially available guys worth trading the mother load of picks/prospects/players for are Giannis and Jokic. Everyone else can go kick rocks.
Dalek wrote:mtcan wrote:NotMyKawhi wrote:Win the lottery or use the pick to trade for a star. Ja, giannis, jokic, sabonis, dame, tre. Gotta get a better #1
Ja...I don't trust him. His behaviour on and off court is just too erratic. Not worth the headache.
Giannis...yes
Jokic...yes
Sabonis...I don't love him as a center...too small. I think people that pick everyone apart because they aren't 2-way players will rip him to shreds.
Dame...he's old and makes too much money
Tre...see my comment above about the defence
Only 2 potentially available guys worth trading the mother load of picks/prospects/players for are Giannis and Jokic. Everyone else can go kick rocks.
No KD? I know he is old but he really takes care of himself and still provides high level play.
Syd-TK3 wrote:Cooper
Dylan
Ace/ VJ
Tre/fears
Has always been the only guys I locked in on so its very ironic that we have the 7th odds
Godaddycurse wrote:Dalek wrote:mtcan wrote:Ja...I don't trust him. His behaviour on and off court is just too erratic. Not worth the headache.
Giannis...yes
Jokic...yes
Sabonis...I don't love him as a center...too small. I think people that pick everyone apart because they aren't 2-way players will rip him to shreds.
Dame...he's old and makes too much money
Tre...see my comment above about the defence
Only 2 potentially available guys worth trading the mother load of picks/prospects/players for are Giannis and Jokic. Everyone else can go kick rocks.
No KD? I know he is old but he really takes care of himself and still provides high level play.
Kd is expiring and really old
WuTang_OG wrote:
Dalek wrote:Godaddycurse wrote:Dalek wrote:
No KD? I know he is old but he really takes care of himself and still provides high level play.
Kd is expiring and really old
Still, the man averaged 27 PPG on 53/43/84 playing 36.5 mins. He played 62 games but they rested him a fair bit at the end. He played 75 games the year before.
To me, even on an expiring, KD is a gamer and can lift your team to a high level. And if it doesn't work out we can swing a trade at the deadline.
My argument is, if Toronto finds themselves drafting the guard of the future (Dylan Harper) then IQ's salary is unnecessary and as well as RJ's future salary. A trade for KD consolidates two assets that we can move on from.
Dalek wrote:Godaddycurse wrote:Dalek wrote:
No KD? I know he is old but he really takes care of himself and still provides high level play.
Kd is expiring and really old
Still, the man averaged 27 PPG on 53/43/84 playing 36.5 mins. He played 62 games but they rested him a fair bit at the end. He played 75 games the year before.
To me, even on an expiring, KD is a gamer and can lift your team to a high level. And if it doesn't work out we can swing a trade at the deadline.
My argument is, if Toronto finds themselves drafting the guard of the future (Dylan Harper) then IQ's salary is unnecessary and as well as RJ's future salary. A trade for KD consolidates two assets that we can move on from.
Syd-TK3 wrote:Cooper
Dylan
Ace/ VJ
Tre/fears
Has always been the only guys I locked in on so its very ironic that we have the 7th odds
earthtone wrote:Gonna throw some Maluach love in here. Great piece from Swish Theory which will answer questions for anyone wondering why some people are high on him: https://theswishtheory.com/scouting-reports/khaman-maluach/
On his 3-point shooting potential:The ball misses more than it makes in that video, but his percentages in the BAL were good for age and position, 32% on 57 attempts. Focus as well on the fluidity, where Maluach is able to keep his balance even when shooting off of some movement. The release is quick and high with a good follow-through. Draft analysts talk about energy transfer and the smoothness from set up to release jumps off the screen.
The key to whether his shot makes or misses is his right foot. The one inconsistency in his form, when he turns it inward too much he loses his distance accuracy. Every time the foot faces relatively direct to the basket, the form is sweet. It is unfortunate how little interest Duke has in developing this part of his game, but the instincts are there. Convincingly.
On his At-Rim finishing:Khaman Maluach’s bread and butter, however, will be his rim finishing. Maluach is flat-out one of the best lob threats the NCAA has seen. He is 23 for 24 as the roll man finisher at the basket, with his 95% mark surpassing that of all recent big men prospects:
Four major components make Maluach possibly the best recent roll man prospect. First, his standing reach is 9’8”. That is an inch more than Wemby. No more need to contextualize that. Second, his screening is excellent. Maluach has already mastered the art of the moving screen which doesn’t get called. This opens up all the space needed.
Third, Maluach has excellent touch near the basket, able to force the ball in even when he can’t finish the lob. He is 21 for 27 (78%) on layups! Compare that again to our big man comparables: Chet was 71%, Mobley 66%, Lively only 52%. Khaman is always two inches away from the rim when he reaches up and can softly guide the ball in from there.
Last, Maluach is excellent at waiting until the last moment to leap. That is perhaps the most essential rim running trait of all. Much like his shooting technique, his footwork is precise and light, shuffling just as needed before taking off. He is a highly accurate leaper, more important than any max vertical when you are already that tall (though his max vertical is not bad, either)./
On his defense:Even throughout the season, it is evident Maluach has refined his technique and begun to better anticipate offensive actions. He has always been one of the most vocal players on the defensive side of the court, now clearly locked in with his teammates. Duke’s defense has a ridiculous 86.7 defensive rating when Khaman is on the court, compared to a still elite 90.1 when off. However, their opponents’ rim shooting goes down a sharp 12 percentage points from 57% to 45% when Maluach is on the court, and on lower volume, too (numbers versus top 100 teams only). The supporting cast is elite, but the numbers are what they’re supposed to be for a primary rim-protecting prospect.
Overall Final AnalysisWith his floor spacing potential, rim finishing superiority, and potential ball skill competency, Maluach’s ceiling as an offensive player is quite high. Due to the variety of ways he can improve, the floor is high, too. If Kristaps Porzingis is the reasonable upside comparison on offense, that puts Khaman as a +2-3 points per 100 offensive player in his peak, in the range of 25th to 50th best offensive player in the league. If the shot really hits and he is able to string together a couple dribbles consistently, we smash through that ceiling.
On defense, Maluach will likely take up primary rim protector duties, perhaps in bench units to begin his career, rather than as a helpside four. He is mobile enough, however, to play next to another big simultaneously (once again, think Porzingis next to Horford). This once again speaks to Maluach’s favorable combination of high ceiling and floor. If the instincts continue to improve at this pace, he will become a highly effective drop defender, even by NBA standards. He might be able to do that while not being taken advantage on switches, either. I don’t think a +1.5-2.0 points per 100 contribution on defense is out of the question, in the range of tenth to thirtieth best defender in the league.
Adding it all up, Maluach could range from a +2 to +6 points per 100 added in his prime. In simpler terms, I cannot rule out All NBA appearances and have a baseline of solid starter.
Have him #3 on my big board & I think he'll rise throughout the pre-draft process and end up as a Top 5 selection come draft day (depending on how the lotto shakes out)
NinjaBro wrote:Who we picking at 11, boys?