REJECTEDBYCLARK wrote:Bilal blowing by defenders in those vids has more to do with how poorly he was defended rather than showing special dribble penetration and finishing ability. France's U21 league is filled with scrubs. So many times he's just completely uncontested driving to the rim because of a poor defensive rotation or some form of bad defending. Envisioning what he would be doing as a college freshman I don't see him pulling most of that stuff off against NCAA competition. He's too raw for my liking and he's 3 years away from being 3 years away, it's just facts. That's assuming he actually develops his game and his body enough to be successful to any degree against NBA competition.
This is a more accurate take
- Bilal started to really shine in the FIBA U18 2022 (It had Cissoko, Little, Berke, Rupert). However the french team is deep and he didn't get too much playing time. Still his athleticism was noted and he was identified as up and coming but raw
- He outbattled Bronny in an exhibition. Showing his athleticism and skill and more importantly fire
- Met (VW's squad) has a jv and varsity team. He started out playing on the jv squad this year and dominated. If you see his highlights, most of them are schooling these guys. He was so dominant they called him up where his role changed playing with VW. He still played very well. If you want comparison, the Met team beat Ignite twice. Ignite is probably the worse team in the G-League so this Met team has lower than G-League talent but higher than NCAA talent. His numbers in varsity are 4/2/0.5 on 60/60/50. Once again he was considered raw but has made huge leaps this season to get to where he is now.
- In terms of comparing him to Bruno, the big difference is motor. Bruno has the motor of a pony. Bilal has the motor of a stallion. Bilal is respectful but he wants to beat you, dunk on you. Respectfully. What has kept him back? I got this from a french magazine (his character is very high btw).
And if no one knew Bilal Coulibaly a year ago, it's because the Mets "took [their] time with him" , by Philippe Sudre's own admission. ... a playmaker, from the top of his 182 centimeters at the time (while he is now close to 2 meters). Then, his development was punctuated by obstacles: a back injury, the Covid, vitamin problems with iron deficiencies... In fact, in the 2019/20 and 2020/21 ... he only competed three games with the cadets."But last year, he began to flourish with the U18 group, to become the leader (23.9 points), and he then took his place in Espoirs (11.8 points)"... . Better: in 2022, {he} suddenly became one of the most famous prospects in French basketball, standing out for his ability to play and defend at three positions, accumulating individual awards, successively MVP of the international tournament of Bellegarde-sur-Valserine and MVP of the Euro Tour Axis , this famous match in mondovision against Bronny James and company mid-August in Nanterre.
I won't consider who we should pick until after measurements / tests are done but I know Masai said he wanted long, lengthy players. He also said he wanted scorers / shooters. He also wants guys that can guard at multiple positions. Bilal has most of that and he used to be a guard. He reminds me of a young TMac for a few reasons. 1. his body is long, lean and explosive. 2. he handles the ball well. 3. he's always attacking the rim, pure scorer (that's why he shoots over 50% - closer to 60%) 4. he glides with the ball (good Eurostep) 5. he can be effective as a secondary player until it's his time. I definitely like him over the Thompson twins because to me they're uber-athletes that play basketball. He seems more like a basketball player that is athletic. Remember he's only 18 though, so he's going to be raw for a couple more years. However he has the potential. Plus a French All-Star level player would be huge for MLSE. That's all I would say about him. Anyway I will leave you with some young TMac to enjoy.
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