Fran Fraschilla has been reading my posts. He just came out with a
Noel vs. Len piece for ESPN Insider.Key highlights:
FF talks about Noel's positives -- elite shotblocking, great hands, etc. BUt...
Noel, with his slight frame, was mauled at times by physical SEC big men (who are marginal NBA prospects) like Florida's Patric Young and Tennessee's Jarnell Stokes. In fact, I was surprised to see how often Kentucky either double-teamed in the post or dug the ball out of there with their guards to protect Noel in one-on-one situations.
As an NBA big man, Noel will spend a lot of time defending in screen-and-roll situations on the perimeter. On those plays in college, I thought Noel's footwork and lateral quickness were average at best, and belied what is supposed to be elite athletic ability.
Len, at 7-1 and 250 pounds, has prototype NBA center size and he is a good athlete for his size and age (he'll turn 20 years old just 11 days before the draft). While improved strength would be a welcome addition, he has already added nearly 40 pounds since arriving in College Park, and there's room for 25 more, according to his coaching staff.
In addition, Len has very good hands, is quick off his feet and has a good touch around the basket. He has a face-up game that is evolving and good first-step quickness off the lane against similarly sized players. I believe he will have more space to operate within the NBA, as well.
Len, despite his length, is not a prolific shot blocker. A block rate of 8 percent placed him in the top 70 college players. I was impressed, however, with how well he moved his feet in defending screen-and-roll situations, even though he played the second part of the season on what appeared to be a badly sprained ankle.
This is a tougher call than it looks. Again, Noel is a safe selection. Few will criticize a team for taking him, in part, because conventional wisdom has had him going No.1 or No. 2 all season long. If a team wants to try to hit a home run, Len could be their guy.
I love Noel's one-tool elite shot-blocking ability, but if I'm making the pick, I'd swing for the fences with Len.
This piece is interesting in combo with Chad Ford's latest lotto-mock. He still has Len slipping to us at 8 or 9 in the large majority of scenarios. At the end of the day, I think Len will rise; I'd be surprised to see Phoenix settle on Oladipo over him. I could see Charlotte and New Orleans taking him depending on where they landed as well.