Inigo Montoya wrote:SoCalJazzFan wrote:The latest Ringer Big Board has Cam Whitmore #9, which I know would please many Jazz fans ( https://nbadraft.theringer.com/ )
For those in love with him as a prospect, please explain to me how his strengths overcome his utter lack of court vision/passing/playmaking.
Edit: All of Leonard Miller, GG Jackson, and Bilal C would be available on their Big Board, which would make me happy if the Jazz selected a PG with #9.
Yes, Whitmore at #9 will please me greatly. He's only 18 and in fact, if he was two and a half weeks older he would have been too young to be eligible to enter the draft.
No prospect is perfect but if the main criticism about him is lack of court vision/passing/playmaking, I'd say he's a damn good prospect. I'd imagine you can train and develop an 18 year old with all the physical and athletic tools and with plenty of skill how to pass the ball and play within a system. Or, use him as a finisher. Markkanen only averaged 1.9 assists last season and I'm sure Whitmore can accomplish that. In short, I'd say that his main deficiency can be taught, developed and overcome, while he's got pretty much everything else you want. That's an easy pick at #9, and someone I'd be willing to trade up for and consider it a very nice consolation prize for missing on Victor, Scoot or Miller.
If the fact that he were 2.5 weeks younger that he would not qualify for the draft, then GG Jackson, who is 5.5 months younger than Cam Whitmore, would not be draft eligible. Perhaps you are confusing their draft eligibility.
Along those lines, if an NBA team can teach a young player to overcome his weaknesses, then GG should be our man as he skipped his senior year of high school and is younger than Cam (younger than everyone in the draft), has great size and athleticism and promising skills and will probably be available at #16. The concern about him is similar to Whitmore, can he play in a team system where he has to be aware of open teammates and will not always be the go to scorer?
Arguably, if a team can teach a young kid to overcome their deficiencies, then the Thompson twins should be #2 and #3, respectively, in this draft as they have everything one would want in a prospect aside from shooting.
I just don't buy into the belief that teams can mold their players into something that they are not. The reaility is that some of these players will always have their deficiency, at least to some degree, and the question is how effective will they be even with that deficiency.
Court awareness and vision seem to be something that players either have or don't have. Perhaps Cam will be awesome regardless of this deficiency as he does have some really nice attributes, but it is concerning to me.



















