WizarDynasty wrote:I think that Davis could play a similar role to noah except davis has absolulety no shot blocking ability compared to noah.

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WizarDynasty wrote:I think that Davis could play a similar role to noah except davis has absolulety no shot blocking ability compared to noah.


nate33 wrote:WizarDynasty wrote:I think that Davis could play a similar role to noah except davis has absolulety no shot blocking ability compared to noah.
go'stags wrote:Nivek, if you get time, how does Mike Scott from UVA rank in your stuff?
DCZards wrote:Consig, I agree will all that you say about Barnes. But I have this sneaky suspicion that he's going to be a solid pro because I believe he has the work ethic and maturity to get better...and he can shoot the rock, which is increasingly a lost art in the NBA. I think whoever gets Harrison with what is likely to be the 8-12 pick is going to be very happy with him down the road.
Of course, my real sleeper in this draft is still Austin Rivers, who will have made believers out of a lot of the doubters 2-3 years from now. He'll likely get drafted in the top 15.
The Consiglieri wrote:
On Dwight Howard and Orlando. I really feel for Orlando. They should have dealt him at the deadline in '11, or in the summer of '11. Huge mistake to keep him, now they screwed up their 2012 draft slot, killed his trade value (as much as you can kill it), killed their negotiating position in trades etc. Just awful. Should have moved him. Now they're D.O.A. for the '12 playoffs, and the '12-'13 season, just ahead of a dog mess draft. Finally found a team besides Sacramento in more disaray than us and with an even worse plan.
The Consiglieri wrote:
Rivers should have gone back to school. He really made a mistake. Next year's draft is crap, he's already set with money, if he went back to school he'd be taught by one of the best coaches in the country for two years, a guy who even maxes out nba players ability and team work, and he'd have his game identity down, and be a much better product. He would have had a chance to go top 3 next year, and maybe top 2. Instead, depending upon how the players fall, he'll probably go in that 10-15 area.
Why do that? I don't understand it at all.
DCZards wrote:The Consiglieri wrote:
Rivers should have gone back to school. He really made a mistake. Next year's draft is crap, he's already set with money, if he went back to school he'd be taught by one of the best coaches in the country for two years, a guy who even maxes out nba players ability and team work, and he'd have his game identity down, and be a much better product. He would have had a chance to go top 3 next year, and maybe top 2. Instead, depending upon how the players fall, he'll probably go in that 10-15 area.
Why do that? I don't understand it at all.
Agree that Rivers should have stayed in school. I have a hunch that he (and maybe even his father) felt that Duke and Coach K's style of play turned out not to be the best fit for him.
Nivek wrote:I'm a BPA proponent, but I think Mufasa makes a good point: sometimes it's hard to tell who the BPA is. At #1 this year, it's easy. After that, in my analysis, players are falling into groups with similar ratings. At that point, "best" can depend on lots of different variables. In this draft, Davis is in a class by himself. After that, I think Crowder is #2. I have MKG on that same tier, but the more research I do on him, the less I think he belongs there -- I think he's in with that next group with guys like Robinson, Beal, etc.
The point is that Robinson, Beal and MKG (for example) rate about the same. In that instance, picking the guy who's the best fit makes a lot of sense. It would be idiocy to be sitting at #2 and take Perry Jones because the team "needs" a SF. Because he's rated a few tiers away.
However, let's say that a tier ends at 7 players. If I'm picking 7th, I'm not going to reach into that next tier down for that selection. I'm going to pick from that higher tier, even if there's only one guy left, even if I might already have a guy on the roster who can fill that need. (Well, really what I'd be trying to do there is trade out of the pick, but assuming I couldn't do that right away, I'd pick the guy I think is best.)
Nivek wrote:I wonder what Cleveland is doing to rate Tristan Thompson 2nd overall last year. I had him with a mid-2nd round score. His efficiency was about average overall, but his 2pt percentage was lower than I'd want from a PF and he was below 50% from the FT line. No 3pt shot. His quickness and leaping were impressive, and his block numbers were good, but his rebounding was only about average for a PF.
Knowing the stat guys at Cleveland, they're probably using some kind of +/- evaluation.
Interesting.
theboomking wrote:Ruzious wrote:That type of analysis is why Crowder hasn't been rated as a prospect. It's the - putting a round peg into a square hole analysis - rather than figuring out how to use a player according to his strengths and weaknesses. Maybe you devise an offense where you don't need your small forward to be a shot creater. Maybe he can be used like he was at Marquette - and he did play out on the perimeter quite a lot.
Meh. There are tons of guys in the NCAA every year with great stats. C.J. McCollum and Doug McDermott are in the top 4 of NCAA PER this year. Are they deserving of being top 5 picks? You can't just look at the stats of college players. Nivek himself said none of Crowder's evaluation came from his physical traits.
Nivek, how does your projection evaluate McDermott?
The Consiglieri wrote:Oh and an MKG and Singleton analogy? Lets get real here, get serious. All NBA GM's and scouts are that seriously deluded? Really? Sure, they miss sometimes, and sometimes big time, Thabeet for instance, though its understandable, he dominated as a defensive big, and had an adequate if not awe inspiring offensive game, but still, MKG/Singleton? As Ford related the other day:
Link: http://espn.go.com/sportsnation/chat/_/ ... -chad-ford
On MKG:
Not sure I've ever seen a player play harder than MKG. He also is an amazing finisher around the basket. He defends three positions in the pros. He's a natural leader who quickly took over a locker room filled with NBA prospects. If he was just an athlete, I'd understand the hesitation. But he's much, much, more. If he gets a jump shot, he could be one of the best players in the league someday.
On who to take at #2
Kidd-Gilchrist. Raptors need toughness in the worst way. He would immediately transform the culture there. That's why I think I'd lean toward MKG in Washington as well. Will be a tough call between him and Beal. Beal is a better offensive player. Just think teams that are mired in a losing culture will want a kid like MKG that only cares about winning.
Kings have plenty of scorers. Need toughness, maturity, leadership. MKG all the way.
On Waiters and Rivers:
Who gets drafted higher, Dion Waiters or Austin Rivers? Who has the better NBA career?
Chad Ford
(1:09 PM)
That's the question on every scout's mind right now. Both about the same size. Both players are pure scorers. Waiters is a much better athlete. Rivers is craftier and a better shooter. Both players have reputations of being a bit difficult or cocky. I bet they'll be going head-to-head in virtually every workout.
On Barnes:
He played two years of mid-lottery type basketball. Judging guys in high school is obviously a very imperfect science. Ditto for college guys by the way. But Barnes just wasn't the same dominant player when the competition stiffened.
Jeremy H (Minneapoils)
Harrison Barnes sliding reminds when Rudy Gay slid to pick # 8 in the 2006 draft...Teams that pass on him will regret it, Thoughts?
Chad Ford
(1:55 PM)
Possible. It's not a bad comp.
On Wroten:
Interviews will be key. Everyone sees the talent. Concerned about the intangibles, leadership ability. If he aces those, he could go very, very high. I think he's a Top 5-6 talent.
On Zeller:
Think he's a Top 10 pick. Has a little Pau Gasol in him scouts think.