dobrojim wrote:Zonkerbl wrote:DCZards wrote:Starter on a championship team…that’s a lot more reasonable than “superstar.”
Well yeah, that's the floor of your probability distribution. The mean would be "coaches pick to the all star team", and 50% of the time you should get better than that - occasional to perennial fan picked all star.
Like, a #1 pick should have a 25% chance to be hall of famer, 50% chance to be a perennial all star, 20% chance coaches pick, 5% Kwame Brown.
A #2 pick should have a 10% HoF chance, 35% perennial all star chance, 25% coaches pick, 20% chance starter on a championship caliber team, 10% chance Darko Milicic
Curious what PiF would say about this....
I've been off the reservation for a week as we've gone through a move.
As to drafts & player career quality, it's obvious that the numbers aren't nearly large enough to make the distribution curve statistically significant. In fact, the raw data doesn't look anything like that good!
Here are the 20 guys taken second in the draft from 2002-2021:
Jay Williams
Darko Milicic
Emeka Okafor
Marvin Williams
LaMarcus Aldridge
Kevin Durant
Michael Beasley
Hasheem Thabeet
Evan Turner
Derrick Williams
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist
Victor Oladipo
Jabari Parker
D’Angelo Russell
Brandon Ingram
Lonzo Ball
Marvin Bagley III
Ja Morant
James Wiseman
I see 9 guys who, basically, range from complete busts to utterly meh (Milicic, Beasley, Thabeet, D. Williams, Kidd-Gilchrist, Parker, Ball, Bagley III, & Wiseman). Plus Jay Williams, whose career was ended by injury after 2000 minutes.
That's 10 of the 20.
I do see one HOF player (Durant) & one other extraordinary player (Morant). Plus another very high-quality player: Aldridge.
That's 3 of the 20.
Then there are the other 7: Okafor, Williams, Turner, Oladipo, Russell, Ingram, Ball.
Those guys were either starters or high-level journeymen -- or likely could have been if their careers hadn't been derailed by injury.
That's the context for discussing Alexander Sarr.