Scase wrote:ATLTimekeeper wrote:theonlyeastcoastrapsfan wrote:
That would be fine if random joes off the street were running the workouts but these guys are supposed to be able to know what they are doing. I know players don't work out all the time. But less common is just being flat out wrong about what a players skills and attribute are. Who else thought at least on Day one Gradey can space the floor? It's ok if you're wrong, you'd have assumed they wouldn't have drafted him if he couldn't. Again, its one thing if its like if he can add to x with Y - but its like if Gradey ever becomes a good 3pt shooter, he can be a good 3 pt shooter in the league. Why draft that guys when there were others who you could see could do that?
Those of us that hang out in the draft threads know that drafting a one dimensional shooter is a risk, because it is often the skill that is hardest to translate immediately and then the player has little else to keep them on the floor.
But, there's like no security whatsoever in who is drafting. This is a bogus concept that fans and some media throw around. If you keep the job long enough you'll have no shortage of absolute turkeys and passing on franchise altering talent. This could be the case with Gradey, but he's so young that I wouldn't get too heated. It's not even January into his rookie year.
It's all about risk management IMO. Drafting a 1 trick pony with as you mentioned, a skill that is hardest to translate, vs picking a player that shows skill in multiple aspects of their game, is less about guaranteed security, and more about the likelihood of it working out.
A guy who does 5 things ok, has a better chance to succeed than a guy who does well at a singular thing. Maybe Gradey turns it all around, but it seems like more and more it was an ill advised pick.
Quite the opposite. The guys who succeed tend to come into the league with at least one Grade A NBA skill.
In any case, I wouldn't have said Grady was a "one trick pony". Early on, I was impressed with how he used his length to make good passes, rebound and get steals. For a skinny 19 year old, he seemed to have a lot of tools.
We're only getting frustrated because EVERYTHING the front office has done since drafting Scottie has not worked out. They traded down in 2022 to draft Koloko - he can't play, and neither can Thad. Precious looked great - until he stopped looking great. Otto seemed like a perfect signing, but he can't play. The defensible decision not to trade Fred at the deadline now seems stupid. Schroder seemed like a good signing, but is a classic case of "live by the Dennis, die by the Dennis". McDaniels has no NBA skill, and can't see the floor. And there's Jak - $20 mill AAV for a bench, non-shooting big?
We'd more easily forgive Dick his rookie foibles if just one, f'in thing had gone right in the last two seasons.