penbeast0 wrote:ReggiesKnicks wrote:penbeast0 wrote:
It counts as a hit but not as one where he went against consensus. But, he does get credit for not choosing whoever the Sam Bowie of that year was.
He gets credit for not taking Greg Oden since Greg Oden was picked #1 and Oklahoma City had the #2 pick?
The mental gymnastics here are incredible.
AS you can surely see yourself, there's a difference though I don't blame Portland or their GM for picking Oden. Injuries aren't something you can predict. He gets a minimal amount of credit for Durant over Horford, or someone like Jeff Green. People do make the wrong choice, like Bowie, or my Wiz taking Kwame Brown over #2 Pau Gasol. Often, but not always, the consensus choice is the right one.
So I wanted to jump in here because I think beast & I see things similarly, but because he's expressing with nuance I'm not sure if it's clear.
When he said "not choosing Bowie of that year", I interpreted that to mean broadly choosing the (actual, not just projected) BPA rather than reaching for someone less talented in the name of fit. As such, given that Oden was already off the board before they picked, beat wasn't talking about Oden about the possibility of picking someone other than Durant at the 2nd spot and instead picking someone else available.
Folks I think are clearly confused because Oden like Bowie had huge injury issues, and that's understandable, but regardless of those similarities, Oden was off the board, end of story.
Beyond that, I do think we all have the reaction of "Who would the Bowie even have been given that 2007 was about the most clear cut 2-man-draft draft we ever saw?". There really was no discussion about who to pick 2nd, it was always "Whichever of the two superstar talents doesn't go #1."
But I do think it's worth recalling that:
a) Bowie was a freshman in '79-80, so by the time of the 1984 Draft, he was positively ancient by modern draft pick standards.
b) Bowie only made 3rd team All-SEC in the '83-84 season, so we're not talking about an actual dominant college star.
c) If we compare Bowie to the #1 pick 2-years-younger Hakeem based on box score stats:
PPG: Hakeem 16.8 on 64.7% TS, Bowie 10.5 on 56.2.
RPG: Hakeem 13.5, Bowie 9.2
BPG: Hakeem 5.6, Bowie 1.9
SPG: Hakeem 1.6, Bowie 0.6
While it's not like Portland ever made the case that Bowie was debatable against Hakeem for the top spot, I do think picking Bowie second kind of implies that at the very least they were getting a "poor man's #1 big", and to me this is where things get so damning. If you were imagining Bowie as a big time defensive anchor, how could you ignore the fact he's only blocking 1/3rd of the shots as the guy he's supposed to be the poor man of?
I've said before and I'll say again: I think the fact that Bowie's team got to the Final 4 at a time when Hakeem & Patrick Ewing did too made the Blazers thing "bigs are how you win, and since Ewing isn't in the draft, we're getting the 2nd best big and thus the 2nd most valuable draft pick".
And thus part of what we're talking about here is essentially "casual GMing". This wasn't a situation where a massive scouting department watched tons of film and came up with a minority opinion, this is about a lazy approach where they were looking for a player archetype and settled on whoever seemed like he could fit.
And while we might say no one is that incompetent today, we can at least say that when Presti drafted Durant, that was proof he wasn't THAT incompetent.
More broadly, as you say, we're kinda talking about 3 tiers of drafting:
Top: Disagreeing with consensus and proving to be right.
Middle: Agreeing with consensus whether they are right or wrong.
Bottom: Disagreeing with consensus and proving to be wrong.
Presti is in the Top tier for guys like Westbrook, Harden & JDub, in the Middle with KD, and I'm not sure if he's ever been in that Bottom tier.
And since you've brought up Kwame, here's my assessment, from years I was therefore, of #1 draft picks who weren't actually consensus top prospects:
1989 - Pervis Ellison (Sac)
1998 - Michael Olowokandi (LAC)
2006 - Andrea Bargnani (Tor)
2013 - Anthony Bennett (Cle)
2024 - Zaccharie Risacher (ATL)
I'd note that in none of these years was there a "sure thing superstar" available for choosing.