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Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us?

Moderators: 7 Footer, Morris_Shatford, DG88, niQ, Duffman100, tsherkin, Reeko, lebron stopper, HiJiNX

Which prospect from the top 3 do you want on our team?

Cooper Flagg
29
38%
Dylan Harper
35
46%
Ace Bailey
12
16%
Other (please make a case in thread)
0
No votes
 
Total votes: 76

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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#61 » by billy_hoyle » Wed Dec 18, 2024 9:37 pm

Ell Curry wrote:
Jerry Lucas wrote:
Ell Curry wrote:
That sounds like a pretty arbitrary distinction. Better to look at the 2nd rounders and the UDFAs even (as I said, Van Vleet was very probably a stats-based decision. Tolzman says "it was a gut feeling" but also another Athletic article says Webster and Tolzman were debating pursuing (we offered 50K guaranteed, 2nd to another team offering 75K that Fred felt was a bad fit (I have no idea who this was or if Fred has ever said, but we had Delon Wright and Cory Joseph backing up Lowry so couldn't have been depth chart based) Fred vs another UDFA, and I imagine Bobby's analysis was at least somewhat stats influenced.

But yeah, I think the best analysis means not cutting off somewhere arbitrary. If you wanna parse it, probably the better distinction is when Weltman left maybe?

I'd like to know why you think it's arbitrary, because to me I don't think it is. A lot of 2nd round picks, especially the ones later on in the 40s and 50s, enter the league on not-fully guaranteed deals and/or two-way contracts. Teams including the Raptors are more willing to take chances on riskier player and/or production archetypes, because a lot of the time these guys aren't getting guaranteed money after their rookie year.

With FRPs (plus very early SRPs like the Koloko pick from the FRP trade down which the FO felt they would get a guy from the same tier anyway, and Mogbo was literally the pick after Round 1 Pick 30), teams are trying to extract the most value possible from the prospect's 4 year rookie-scale contract. As a result teams are less willing to take risks that they would otherwise be willing to take later in the draft.

Example: Ulrich Chomche. He is someone I was talking about as a possible Masai-type last year, but not in a FRP context because he wasn't NCAA. And ever since the Bruno mistake, Masai never strays from the extremely projectable prospect pool of NCAA players. Projecting NCAA production forward to the NBA level is safer than doing so with a prospect from any other type of prospect pool.


It's arbitrary because there isn't a clear line where a draft goes from "we expect a rotation player" to "we probably aren't getting it one." It's not a binary. Also every draft has a different strength of depth.

You could definitely weigh the higher picks more, but I don't think you can just draw a line at say the 40th pick and act like our #39 pick counts in terms of evaluating if someone is a "Masai/Bobby approved guy" but the #40 pick doesn't, for instance. There are surely some scientists or people who are trained to work in data who can weigh in here (though not sure they'll see this post) but my understanding is that you wanna be careful when just choosing to cut out data points, particularly in a study like this when you're already dealing with a small sample size.

I agree with your general conclusions. I don't see Masai looking past Bailey's weak advanced stats and having him say #3 or #4 like some GMs might. But I don't think you learn more by throwing out late picks. We don't know if the Raptors weight their scouts view higher with picks in the 2nd half of the 2nd round more than the 2nd half of the 2nd round. The whole decision making process is a black box that you're trying to see if you can determine trends for. I'd start with all the data and go from there, you can always parse it, not start by cutting out picks that we know for certain the Raptors decided on making.


I think this is all naval gazing.

If we end up with the 3rd pick and Masai drafts Ace, I will be very excited.

I don't think any analysis on advanced stats on RealGM would temper my expectations.

Has Masai ever really done anything egregious in the draft? If anything, he bucks consensus and picks gems.

That said, I have no idea what Masai will do. He picks the guy I expect maybe 30% of the time. He's been right way more than he's been wrong.
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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#62 » by Indeed » Wed Dec 18, 2024 10:26 pm

Jerry Lucas wrote:
TheGeneral99 wrote:
Jerry Lucas wrote:Dylan Harper so far (still kind of early in the college season though, things can still change) is the only 1 of the 3 that is performing like a "Masai-type Lottery level prospect."

Ace Bailey is straight up looking like a future NBA bust so far. Massive red flags everywhere in his production.

Cooper Flagg is also performing very well. The production in general looks great. But Masai has a specific type, and there are some aspects of Cooper Flagg's production that suggest while he is worthy of being considered one of this draft's top prospects, so is Dylan Harper, and he's also producing like a no-doubter "Masai-type" lottery-level prospect, while Flagg isn't.

Masai has never drafted a prospect that isn't "his type" of FRP, over someone that is.

I posted in the draft thread recently outlining this in a bit more detail, and showed my track record on this so far:
https://forums.realgm.com/boards/viewtopic.php?p=115983163#p115983163



Masai may have a type but his type isn't iron clad.

Masai drafted Poeltl with the #9 pick in 2016, he drafted an undersized Powell in 2015, he signed an undrafted undersized guard in Vanvleet in 2016, Flynn was undersized guard in 2021, he drafted Gradey Dick in 2023...

Poeltl, Flynn and Gradey met the production thresholds for Masai-type FRPs in their draft years. Also I already mentioned this in another post I've made in this thread, but the thresholds I look at have nothing to do with general SRPs like Norm. Only FRPs and early SRPs (by early I mean in the 30s like Koloko at 33 and Mogbo at 31).


What was missed from the stats are physical measurements.
Poeltl, Flynn, Dick are not Ujiri type, because their physical measurements are average (or below average).

Certainly the college performance (in stats) are important, but ceiling are also contributed by physical measurements. Therefore, I agree with the stats based measurement, but also it should includes physical measurement. OG, Siakam, Powell, they all have out standing wingspan, quickness and other measurement. That to me are Ujiri type.
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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#63 » by BrunoSkull » Thu Dec 19, 2024 1:23 am

Based on the 9 Duke lives games and 8 Rutgers games I've watched so far, Flagg has the ability to set the tone defensively for the whole team and the mental makeup to will the team back or go on big runs from just being all over on the floor disrupting lane/challenging shots/boxing out, his defense alone helps make many stops that lead to creating turnovers and fast break opportunities, which fits our team model on transition plays, just imagine both him and Scottie with overlapping defensive mindset rubbing off on teammates as a whole, they can bring the team back from behind, that's a recipe of impact.

I understand Harper is a big time offensive threat, he's my favorite prospect only because I doubt NBA will gift us Flagg, but defense wins game just as much as offense, Flagg on the team with his growing offense, he plays relentlessly hard every possession on both ends, he's going to flat out score on high level due to his insane tireless energy on every play, this type of 2 way prowess is rare to find, if not as much as Harper's offensive output, I love Harper's ability to pick his spots to attack, he can hold his own on man-to man using his body and footwork to contain his guy, the downside is he spent less energy not offering weak-side help, doesn't have the intimidating presence like Flagg who can cover a lot of ground, rather Harper reserve focus on offense,

I mean you know what you get, offensive primary ball-dominant talent to run your team, or a 2 way beast, their gap aren't big, 1a/1b type, I pick Flagg because 2 way impacts winning as you go deeper in the playoffs.

If not Flagg or Harper, it's a toss up between Demin (need to see more of him live than just his playmaking clips or Maluach (don't be confused by his stats cos Duke doesn't include him on offense but he does what big man does in all aspect plus he has range, that's a modern big every team salivates for).

Want no part of Bailey, he has more flaws that you pray he can fix in long run. If you think Bargnani destroys realgm traffic every night, Bailey will be worse. 10 threads per game night storming on main page complaining about why Bailey doesn't do this or do that or why he keeps doing 2k fadaway bricks. No thanks.
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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#64 » by mihaic » Thu Dec 19, 2024 1:32 am

LoveMyRaps wrote:Harper
Quickley
Barrett
Barnes
Poeltl

6th Man: Dick

I'll get flamed but... similar team to yours:

Harper
Dick
Barret
Barnes
Poeltl

6th Man: Quickley

Quickley is the perfect 6th man as he can run the point with the second team.
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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#65 » by Jerry Lucas » Thu Dec 19, 2024 2:46 am

Ell Curry wrote:
Jerry Lucas wrote:
Ell Curry wrote:
That sounds like a pretty arbitrary distinction. Better to look at the 2nd rounders and the UDFAs even (as I said, Van Vleet was very probably a stats-based decision. Tolzman says "it was a gut feeling" but also another Athletic article says Webster and Tolzman were debating pursuing (we offered 50K guaranteed, 2nd to another team offering 75K that Fred felt was a bad fit (I have no idea who this was or if Fred has ever said, but we had Delon Wright and Cory Joseph backing up Lowry so couldn't have been depth chart based) Fred vs another UDFA, and I imagine Bobby's analysis was at least somewhat stats influenced.

But yeah, I think the best analysis means not cutting off somewhere arbitrary. If you wanna parse it, probably the better distinction is when Weltman left maybe?

I'd like to know why you think it's arbitrary, because to me I don't think it is. A lot of 2nd round picks, especially the ones later on in the 40s and 50s, enter the league on not-fully guaranteed deals and/or two-way contracts. Teams including the Raptors are more willing to take chances on riskier player and/or production archetypes, because a lot of the time these guys aren't getting guaranteed money after their rookie year.

With FRPs (plus very early SRPs like the Koloko pick from the FRP trade down which the FO felt they would get a guy from the same tier anyway, and Mogbo was literally the pick after Round 1 Pick 30), teams are trying to extract the most value possible from the prospect's 4 year rookie-scale contract. As a result teams are less willing to take risks that they would otherwise be willing to take later in the draft.

Example: Ulrich Chomche. He is someone I was talking about as a possible Masai-type last year, but not in a FRP context because he wasn't NCAA. And ever since the Bruno mistake, Masai never strays from the extremely projectable prospect pool of NCAA players. Projecting NCAA production forward to the NBA level is safer than doing so with a prospect from any other type of prospect pool.


It's arbitrary because there isn't a clear line where a draft goes from "we expect a rotation player" to "we probably aren't getting it one." It's not a binary. Also every draft has a different strength of depth.

You could definitely weigh the higher picks more, but I don't think you can just draw a line at say the 40th pick and act like our #39 pick counts in terms of evaluating if someone is a "Masai/Bobby approved guy" but the #40 pick doesn't, for instance. There are surely some scientists or people who are trained to work in data who can weigh in here (though not sure they'll see this post) but my understanding is that you wanna be careful when just choosing to cut out data points, particularly in a study like this when you're already dealing with a small sample size.

I agree with your general conclusions. I don't see Masai looking past Bailey's weak advanced stats and having him say #3 or #4 like some GMs might. But I don't think you learn more by throwing out late picks. We don't know if the Raptors weight their scouts view higher with picks in the 2nd half of the 2nd round more than the 2nd half of the 2nd round. The whole decision making process is a black box that you're trying to see if you can determine trends for. I'd start with all the data and go from there, you can always parse it, not start by cutting out picks that we know for certain the Raptors decided on making.

For me IMO the contracts thing is relevant as I laid out in my previous reply to you.

I should have been more clear, by 30s I more so meant like early 30s (just outside the 1st round) like Koloko and Mogbo were. But in terms of the part I bolded, I think you might wanna look at my Chomche example again, if that's what your takeaway is there.
My Masai/Bobby-type FRP Barttorvik queries: 4/4, zero misses

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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#66 » by Jerry Lucas » Thu Dec 19, 2024 2:57 am

Indeed wrote:
Jerry Lucas wrote:
TheGeneral99 wrote:
Masai may have a type but his type isn't iron clad.

Masai drafted Poeltl with the #9 pick in 2016, he drafted an undersized Powell in 2015, he signed an undrafted undersized guard in Vanvleet in 2016, Flynn was undersized guard in 2021, he drafted Gradey Dick in 2023...

Poeltl, Flynn and Gradey met the production thresholds for Masai-type FRPs in their draft years. Also I already mentioned this in another post I've made in this thread, but the thresholds I look at have nothing to do with general SRPs like Norm. Only FRPs and early SRPs (by early I mean in the 30s like Koloko at 33 and Mogbo at 31).


What was missed from the stats are physical measurements.
Poeltl, Flynn, Dick are not Ujiri type, because their physical measurements are average (or below average).

Certainly the college performance (in stats) are important, but ceiling are also contributed by physical measurements. Therefore, I agree with the stats based measurement, but also it should includes physical measurement. OG, Siakam, Powell, they all have out standing wingspan, quickness and other measurement. That to me are Ujiri type.

Not sure if I had this discussion with you or another poster in a previous draft year thread, but I've posted in the past that I consider having a positive wingspan to height ratio to be vital for Masai-type FRPs (he doesn't want any t-rex wingspan guys). I don't agree with you that they all have to be well above average like the OG/Siakam types as you mentioned. But in general I agree with you that physical measurements are definitely important for Masai, beyond production.
My Masai/Bobby-type FRP Barttorvik queries: 4/4, zero misses

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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#67 » by Indeed » Thu Dec 19, 2024 3:41 am

Jerry Lucas wrote:
Indeed wrote:
Jerry Lucas wrote:Poeltl, Flynn and Gradey met the production thresholds for Masai-type FRPs in their draft years. Also I already mentioned this in another post I've made in this thread, but the thresholds I look at have nothing to do with general SRPs like Norm. Only FRPs and early SRPs (by early I mean in the 30s like Koloko at 33 and Mogbo at 31).


What was missed from the stats are physical measurements.
Poeltl, Flynn, Dick are not Ujiri type, because their physical measurements are average (or below average).

Certainly the college performance (in stats) are important, but ceiling are also contributed by physical measurements. Therefore, I agree with the stats based measurement, but also it should includes physical measurement. OG, Siakam, Powell, they all have out standing wingspan, quickness and other measurement. That to me are Ujiri type.

Not sure if I had this discussion with you or another poster in a previous draft year thread, but I've posted in the past that I consider having a positive wingspan to height ratio to be vital for Masai-type FRPs (he doesn't want any t-rex wingspan guys). I don't agree with you that they all have to be well above average like the OG/Siakam types as you mentioned. But in general I agree with you that physical measurements are definitely important for Masai, beyond production.


So far we are still having well above average like Barnes (for PF), Mogbo (for PF), Agbaji (for SG), Walter (for SG) and Barrett (for SG). Based on height ratio, they are pretty much well above average.

Maybe we don't have to be well above average, but I wouldn't be surprised there could be correlation with well above average (except shooters and PG) and being game changer with stats to support.
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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#68 » by Indeed » Thu Dec 19, 2024 3:43 am

mihaic wrote:
LoveMyRaps wrote:Harper
Quickley
Barrett
Barnes
Poeltl

6th Man: Dick

I'll get flamed but... similar team to yours:

Harper
Dick
Barret
Barnes
Poeltl

6th Man: Quickley

Quickley is the perfect 6th man as he can run the point with the second team.


More like Mogbo would be the starter instead of Dick/Quickley. And we might not have Poeltl for long.
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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#69 » by wegotthabeet » Thu Dec 19, 2024 10:38 am

mihaic wrote:
LoveMyRaps wrote:Harper
Quickley
Barrett
Barnes
Poeltl

6th Man: Dick

I'll get flamed but... similar team to yours:

Harper
Dick
Barret
Barnes
Poeltl

6th Man: Quickley

Quickley is the perfect 6th man as he can run the point with the second team.


I'll get flamed but... similar team to yours (in 2027):

SGA
Dick
Flagg
Barnes
Maluach

6th Man: Quickley or Barrett
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Re: Poll: Which of the consensus top 3 prospects is the best fit for us? 

Post#70 » by TravisScott55 » Thu Dec 19, 2024 3:04 pm

Harper would be so great for the Raptors.

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