BlazersBroncos wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:mademan wrote:Im not sure what he does well and his athleticism doesnt standout on a basketball court. I know its still early but man he doesnt look good
The athleticism thing is the thing that just leaves me shaking my head, because it seems like something that should be easy to evaluate and yet scouts were forever talking about Scoot as if he were an outlier there when he clearly never was.
Like, with a Ben Simmons, in the end the thing that did him in was the weakness (shooting) that we always knew was the weakness, but the stuff that was supposed to be good was indeed good. With Scoot it just seems like the only thing they got right was the fact he couldn't shoot.
To me Scoot feels like like one of the great scouting failures I've ever heard of. This isn't some exotic "high ceiling prospect" from a far away land like Darko. This was someone that had the NBA's full attention, and it just seems like they completely mistook a run of the mill guy for a generational talent. How does this happen?
Honestly - I think there was an aspect of marketing. The next big thing skips college and goes to this new semi pro league, its a story and its different, that alone starts the hype train humming. Add into that the fact he started on the Ignite at like 17 and was not a full blown train wreck and you get people saying 'look at this kid at 17 playing against former NBA guys and holding his own - he has to only continue to get better and better'. No one stopped to think, maybe he is simply well developed for a 17 year old but who knows what that means long term.
Realistically Henderson has made literally no in game progress skill wise since that first season with the Ignite.
Good insight here.
I think the fact he took an atypical path made it harder for scouts to continue to do apples-to-apples comparisons, and so once the hype got going, it had a tendency to just keep going.
I also think the NBA deserves heavy, heavy criticism for the failure of the G-League Ignite because they were specifically pitching the idea that this was the best possible preparation for the NBA, but instead of actually making that their priority, they seemed more interested in furthering the hype to claim evidence for them being "the best possible preparation".
I think they ended up wasting critical years of prospects' development, and also at least in the case of Scoot gave him a false sense that he was continuing to be on pace to be an NBA star when he not only was not, but probably should never have been encouraged to think that was a likely possibility.