2012 NBA Draft - Part II
Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 4:20 am
Sports is our Business
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=1163297
hands11 wrote:Bradley Beal or Thomas Robinson
I am anti Kentucky and NC right now.
The way I see it, this team got its young top draft pick with Wall. This team is so rudderless right now. What they really need to do first is add established vet star power so any future draft picks have an actually team to develop with.
Blind leading the blind is not going to work.
They need to add some Batum, Frye, Melo, etc type talent so they have something established to grow.
Right now, Beal is still the player I want the most out of the top picks. The kid added some muscle and looked to have an NBA ready body. And from the interview I saw of him, I really like his maturity.
Very impressive interview. Sound like he wants to grow more so he can be a SG/SF
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3IDrxF2iXOw&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]
nate33 wrote: The worst case scenario is Barnes at #5
doclinkin wrote:More importantly, and this is key in understanding his late emergence hidden behind Kief and Cus Morris. He displays the classic learning curve of a player who improves every year, suggestive that he will continue to hone his game in the pros. As a freshman he posted a sub 40% free throw percentage, after steady improvement he now flirts with 70%. His fouls per 40 have cut in half from 7 to 3.5. His passing metrics have improved despite his possession percentage jumping from 9% to 24% of team total possessions.
Severn Hoos wrote:doclinkin wrote:More importantly, and this is key in understanding his late emergence hidden behind Kief and Cus Morris. He displays the classic learning curve of a player who improves every year, suggestive that he will continue to hone his game in the pros. As a freshman he posted a sub 40% free throw percentage, after steady improvement he now flirts with 70%. His fouls per 40 have cut in half from 7 to 3.5. His passing metrics have improved despite his possession percentage jumping from 9% to 24% of team total possessions.
doc, thanks for this - good stuff as always. And maybe you can help me get over one last hangup I have with regards to TRob. I get that he has been a steady improver - and also that his per minute & efficiency numbers are virtually the same as last year, just that he's had the opportunity to play more minutes, thus rack up more stats.
The question is - can you give an example of a guy who follows this trend, improving from an OK but low-impact player to star, then became a true game changer in the NBA? And specifically, someone who has done so in the one-and-done era (i.e., roughly the past decade)?