SirChurros wrote:When are we going to stop calling guys unique prospects because they’re 6’7” and can make plays off the dribble?
Especially when they’re 6’5
Moderators: paulpressey25, MickeyDavis
SirChurros wrote:When are we going to stop calling guys unique prospects because they’re 6’7” and can make plays off the dribble?
JonHeist wrote:emunney wrote:JonHeist wrote:
find me literally one person who had him in their top 32
I don't care if it's some other board's fotis... you probably can't
Vecenie had him 32, not that it matters at all.
he's the guy who had insider info
did he have him at 32 a week or two ago?
or only after he knew horst had fallen in love?
I found a mock from 3 months ago and he did not have him top 32
btw I meant big board not mock draft, not that I made that clear, or it matters at all
trwi7 wrote:**** me deep, Giannis. ****. Me. Deep.
Badgerlander wrote:So is Giannis upset that we didn’t draft him any weapons and we end up trading him to the Jets in 3 years?
I think I was probably higher on A.J. Johnson than anyone in the public sphere rating prospects, and I couldn’t get him any higher than No. 32 on my board. Even as a fan of Johnson, I think what the Bucks did tonight was substantially reach on a player that I consider to be a multi-year project while they’re in the middle of what they hope is a title chase in 2025. There were league sources on teams that I spoke with who did not see Johnson as draftable this year (others, like me, had him around the turn of the first round). It’s just a remarkable risk to take for a team that has had about as little success in the NBA Draft as any organization in the league since Jon Horst took over. The only one that is a bona fide hit is Donte DiVincenzo, and the organization gave up on him before he came into his own in Golden State and, especially this past season, in New York. Sam Merrill also qualifies as a hit, but they also gave up on him before he went on to become a lethal shooter in Cleveland’s rotation. The only real hit here is A.J. Green, an undrafted free agent who looks poised to potentially enter their rotation next season.
Johnson certainly represents a swing for the fences, at least. He’s a developmental scoring guard who has some serious wiggle and athleticism. Down the road, I think there are a lot of outcomes where he’s a positive player in the NBA. But he also was among the least productive players in the NBL over in Australia this past season. He’s under 170 pounds and nowhere near playing in the NBA. I had multiple front-office sources from other teams jokingly speculate to me that the Bucks took Johnson simply so Doc Rivers wouldn’t have to worry about playing a rookie in his first full season in charge in Milwaukee.
He’s going to require a lot of time and effort developmentally to reach his ceiling. Truly, I hope he gets it from the Bucks. I think Johnson can be a real player. But the Bucks’ track record over the last seven years hasn’t been particularly strong in that regard. It’s tough to buy into this as a sharp pick. It feels like the Bucks overthought this, especially when it’s likely Johnson would have been available at No. 33.
MVP2110 wrote:Vecenie lists the Bucks as one of his biggest losers despite being one of the analysts highest on AJ Johnson
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5596025/2024/06/27/nba-draft-winners-losers-first-round-jazz-wizards-lakers?source=user-shared-articleI think I was probably higher on A.J. Johnson than anyone in the public sphere rating prospects, and I couldn’t get him any higher than No. 32 on my board. Even as a fan of Johnson, I think what the Bucks did tonight was substantially reach on a player that I consider to be a multi-year project while they’re in the middle of what they hope is a title chase in 2025. There were league sources on teams that I spoke with who did not see Johnson as draftable this year (others, like me, had him around the turn of the first round). It’s just a remarkable risk to take for a team that has had about as little success in the NBA Draft as any organization in the league since Jon Horst took over. The only one that is a bona fide hit is Donte DiVincenzo, and the organization gave up on him before he came into his own in Golden State and, especially this past season, in New York. Sam Merrill also qualifies as a hit, but they also gave up on him before he went on to become a lethal shooter in Cleveland’s rotation. The only real hit here is A.J. Green, an undrafted free agent who looks poised to potentially enter their rotation next season.
Johnson certainly represents a swing for the fences, at least. He’s a developmental scoring guard who has some serious wiggle and athleticism. Down the road, I think there are a lot of outcomes where he’s a positive player in the NBA. But he also was among the least productive players in the NBL over in Australia this past season. He’s under 170 pounds and nowhere near playing in the NBA. I had multiple front-office sources from other teams jokingly speculate to me that the Bucks took Johnson simply so Doc Rivers wouldn’t have to worry about playing a rookie in his first full season in charge in Milwaukee.
He’s going to require a lot of time and effort developmentally to reach his ceiling. Truly, I hope he gets it from the Bucks. I think Johnson can be a real player. But the Bucks’ track record over the last seven years hasn’t been particularly strong in that regard. It’s tough to buy into this as a sharp pick. It feels like the Bucks overthought this, especially when it’s likely Johnson would have been available at No. 33.
trwi7 wrote:**** me deep, Giannis. ****. Me. Deep.
Ron Swanson wrote:Yeah, fair to dismiss the FT stuff with that small of a sample size. I don’t think it’s fair to dismiss how he hasn’t looked like he’s anywhere close to a competent basketball player outside of one scrimmage at the NBA Combine though. Long story short…
ajb905 wrote:Bucks need cheap rotation players due to cap crunch, so while finding them in the draft is hard, it's one of the few avenues they have. I like tremendous upside potential as much as the next guy but if he's going to take 3 years to show something it's a wasted opportunity to either have someone help the team right away or be valuable trade bait for someone who can.