yosemiteben wrote:
That last line of the quote is sticking with me. No chance in hell Monk and Graham are both staying.
His role will be too similar to Monk and Rozier, so I feel like its one of them that will go (obviously will be Monk).
Moderators: BigSlam, yosemiteben, fatlever, JDR720, Diop
yosemiteben wrote:
That last line of the quote is sticking with me. No chance in hell Monk and Graham are both staying.

Strengths
- Nice size and length for a scoring guard at 6-5. Good, open-court player. Plays above the rim with relative ease. Has the feet and length to be a plus defender in time, especially against point guards. Good positional rebounder. Shows you glimpses defensively.
- One of the best scorers in the country. Smooth with the ball in his hands. Changes speeds and directions impressively. Shotmaker who can get to his pull-up out of a variety of different moves. Elite hesitation move going left.
- Creative finisher. Uses deception really well in the paint. Can finish off of either foot with either hand and has a floater game.
Improvement areas
- Had a tendency to fade in and out of games in the past, on both ends of the floor. Jump shot is on the streaky side. Defensive impact fluctuates.
- Better shooter off the dribble than off the catch at this stage of his career. Can improve his ability to add value off the ball. How does he fit alongside other ball-dominant shot creators?
- Shows glimpses as a facilitator but has more turnovers than assists during his career. Can he develop into more of a lead guard, or is he better off as a bucket-getter?
Projected role: Scoring guard
--Mike Schmitz
Post-Draft Analysis
The Hornets hit a home run last year in landing LaMelo Ball and will now look to surround him with the right type of players to maximize his brilliant passing and creativity. A lob-catching big man, and additional shooting on the wings and forward spots, will likely be a priority for Charlotte moving forward, both tonight and in free agency.
In James Bouknight, the Hornets acquired the type of instinctual, professional scoring option every team covets in the backcourt and hopes to mold into the next Devin Booker or Jamal Murray. He looks like a strong fit playing off Ball with his sweet-shooting stroke and terrific cutting ability. To reach his potential, Bouknight will need to show better ability as a passer, shooter and defender than he did in his up and down two seasons at UConn, where we may not have seen the full extent of his talent due to injury. At times he dropped flashes of offensive brilliance that carried over into a strong pre-draft process and helped him establish himself as a lottery pick. Teams seemed to be considering him as high as 6 or 7, but an elbow injury that was identified from high school (which required a screw be inserted), ultimately hurt his stock and dropped him a few spots from where he entered the night projected as. --Jonathan Givony
JDR720 wrote:Spoiler:
So. he's a shooter with a screw in his elbow. That's...not great.

Bassman wrote:Here is a good article predraft on Jame Bouknight. This guy is dedicated to being special.
https://www.si.com/nba/2021/07/28/james-bouknight-2021-nba-draft-uconn




Roll Tide 09 wrote:Robot Rock wrote:I'm fine with it. Let's see how he develops.
Only drawback is I feel like we've never had a great player from UConn here. Scott Burrell, Jeremy Lamb, Jeff Adrien, Roy Hibbert...then again, there was that one guy...
Emeka Okafor was very good prior to injuries.
fatlever wrote:feels like monk 2.0 ... hornets love catching that falling knife. not in love with this. another 1-dimensional undersized guard, with 6th man upside.
Radu_Hornets wrote:I love how Michael Jordan’s height has become the new « undersized » guard.
Soca wrote:Moody would have been a better pick.