Dalek wrote:I have been doing a deeper dive into replacing Trent Jr., looking at who can shoot from outside, has the clutch shooting gene, and won't be a defensive liability. I am starting to buy into Julian Strawther.
/Movement shooting that is comparable to Jordan Hawkins, but he is 6'7
/19 three pointers deeper than 25 feet
/2 clutch game winners including the one to eliminate UCLA from the logo
/62% at the rim, good floater, high FTr at 32
/Excellent rebounder as a guard/forward 19.6% dreb
/Low DBPM at 0.9, but in watching the film he has quick feet on defense, much more switchable than Jett Howard
/strong handle for shot creation
The holy grail of upper classmen lotto picks is Jalen Williams who went lotto in 2022.
Strawther: 6'7 with a 6'10 wingspan; draft age:21
Williams: 6'5 with a 7'2 wingspan; draft age:21
Strawther / Williams
TS% .602 .601
EFG% .568 .562
3PA RATE .484 .248
FTA RATE .331 .330
PROJ NBA3 .372 .357
Swing factor is playmaking. Strawther isn't the passer that Williams is, but he does play well in pick and roll, and he rebounds better than Williams coming in. I think he is going to move up in the draft because of the premium on shooting and his range is NBA level. He also is a guy who wants the ball in clutch moments much like Williams.
For me, the reason Jalen Williams shot up in the draft was the combine. He showed out, and demonstrated superior talent when actually playing/scrimmaging with his cohorts.
It's not just a numbers game. I'd imagine you can find a bunch of players that meet or exceed that criteria (the 5 stats you laid out above) that amount to nothing. I think it's been a large mistake in historical draft strategy to try and mimic a particular player and chase a 'holy grail'.
Next Dirk - tall versatile shooting 7 footer (Tkitishvilli, Yi Jianlian etc.)
Next Wade - big slashing PG/SG (Waiters etc.)
Just my take.