nate33 wrote:fishercob wrote:You mean rather than three-pitch strikeouts?
Vesely was unquestionably a 3-pitch strikeout, but I don't want to overstate EG's suckiness in the draft. Most of his other first round picks have at least been singles. Booker and Seraphin are solid for their draft position, as were Young and McGee.
Unfortunately, we need a couple of doubles and triples. We need guys like Klay Thompson, Kenneth Faried, Ty Lawson, Nikola Vucevic, Larry Sanders, Taj Gibson and Nicolas Batum. I'm not expecting home runs like Roy Hibbert at #18, Paul George at #10 or Chandler Parsons at #38, but we need to find some rock solid starters with picks in the teens. Doubles and triples, not singles.
Ouch ouch ouch ouch. What's funny is with the exception of Paul George I had every single one of those players tabbed as a probable success and looked at as a likely trade-down target:
Klay Thompson: undervalued because of a single marijuana incident, son of NBA player, showed as efficient with good games against tough competition. Nice secondary (non-scoring) stats. Looked the part, passed the eye-test: smooth, in the right place at the right time, one or two NBA calibre plays per game.
Faried I had radio-tagged two years before, had my doubts due to small conference plus he started out skinny, but he put up great numbers against the few ranked teams he faced, and the dude swole up by his final year.
Vucevic was the son of two pro players in Europe and had constantly high rebounding totals and a good balanced fundamentally sound game with a bit of finesse. Standard Euro-fundamentals, plus a track record of interior success against big time competition.
Lawson put up insane numbers, really unbelievable numbers. I did not believe the numbers, but was willing to take him on a trade down and let him prove me wrong. And his speed was unquestionable.
Sanders projected to be a good tough defensive player, and if I recall, his athletic testing was better than expected, proved likely to have the right size and talent level to compete. Worth a late round flier with an extra pick.
Taj Gibson was a teammate of Nick Young, how I saw him first. He was ridiculously consistent and the more important player on the team than Nick. Undersized but a capable rebounder and shotblocker and stat filler, showing he knew how to use 100% of whatever he had to make a difference.
Hibbert went one pick before our selection (#17, McGee was #18) so no complaints there. But I wanted him, seeing his remarkable and constant progression from a complete spaz as a freshman to a polished and reliable player by senior year. He was my pick that year at our likely draft slot. Oh well.
Chandler Parsons had something like 3 last second 3 pt game winners in his college career. Went from spoiled brat wannabe star to reliable no ego roleplayer. Looked to me like the next Big Shot Bob. Of course he ended up in Houston.
Batum I had to trust the reports, so can't count him in the win column. I have no metric for converting from French league stats. But he was long and if inefficient offensively had nice numbers everywhere else, rebounding passing, etc. And his unselfish aspect plus defense seemed like a nice fit next to Gil et al. I figured we could trade back to get him and Mario Chalmers (most important guard on a championship team, clutch 3 pt shooter, defensive back-up for Gil) or JR Giddens (a miss, who I liked due to inflated rebounding numbers in the Mountain West, plus good blocks and steals numbers I think).
Not touting my genius -- this time-- just saying the players are ALWAYS there and usually evident and every year I know if it were me picking I'd do better trading down and picking two than trying to outsmart everybody with an unpolished megatalent higher up in the draft.
For doubles and triples, man I'm your Honus Wagner.