pepe1991 wrote:JF5 wrote:Chet knew he was never coming here... I think the Magic were dead set on a guy who could be a go-to-scorer or a really good scorer. Paolo/Smith/Murray seemed to be the primary choices throughout the whole year.
Paolo, Jabari and Chet were, at college, within 3 points margin in terms of scoring.
Scorer in this sense means just guy who is willing to take more shots, and in this case at expense of quality and efficiency, since Chet was most efficient among them and averaged least amount points (14,1), than Smith (16,9) than Banchero (17,2).
Efficiency vise, 69% TS vs 57% TS vs 55,7% .
It's college basketball and stats don't mean as much, but still, drafting somebody because he is "college scorer" will lead you to situations where you prefer i don't know, Marvin Bagley over Ayton, because he scored more points.
Keegan Murray wasn't even serious considiration once team drew 1st pick. You simply don't draft somebody projected to go between 4 and 10 -with first overall. Guy is 2 years older than other prospects and his college data is inflated due his experience he gained by playing year prior.
Imo, they drafted Paolo Banchero because they view 3 way scoring potential in him. Is it there ? it's debatable. Tiime will tell.
Of the 3, were they all the best player on their team? Smith & Paolo = Yes, Chet debatable.
How balanced were their teams? Duke & Zags very balanced, Aubrun no
Smith was by far the best offensive choice on his team, def. had to force some shots
Paolo had good help, but was looked to be the man delivered most of the time.
Chet had very senior leaders with him, he didn't need to be the man and often it wasn't up to him.
He didn't lead his team in scoring.
Only thing those stats showed is how each performed in their individual situation.
Mix them up, how would they have performed?