DuckIII wrote:Dan Z wrote:drosestruts wrote:A year has made a big difference for a guy like Tidjane Salaun
going to take similar time or more for Noa
I agree that it'll take time. My concern is...will it be worth it?
As per your example, Tidjane Salaun has shown improvement so far in Summer League and let's say he continues to improve. Towards the end of his rookie contract where is he? If he's all-star level that's great, but if he's just a solid starter then they've spent a lot of time/effort with not much to show for it.
I'll add that most people think Matas has the better potential (for good reason) and will be better during the course of their rookie contracts. He was also taken 5 spots after Salaun in the draft.
As for Essengue, I don't expect much in year one, but hope that he shows signs of potential.
I don’t really get your posts, Dan. You seem to be wringing your hands as though this is a unique situation. This is what the NBA draft is. Due diligence followed by hope.
He might be an elite superstar, low level allstar, average starter, below average specialty role player, or an awful bust. Welcome to the draft. We aren’t bad enough to draft guys who have it all.
In our situation, give me guys like Essengue every time over a solid floor lower ceiling guy you can predictably rely on early in his rookie deal. That is what free agency is for.
Also, Noa needing a full year before he can help in any meaningful way is a good thing. We don’t want win a lot this year. Hopefully in the win column we are notably worse.
I don't disagree with you and don't hate the pick. My concern is the front office and ownership more than anything else. The team needs more talent, so going for a player with upside is a good thing. However, the team's goal seems to be that they'll continue for the play-in/playoffs year in and year out.
That means they'll make minor moves like the trade for Okoro and potentially bury Noa on the bench. When the Bucks drafted Giannis (and again I don't think Noa has Giannis potential) they gave him ample opportunity to develop. In his rookie year he played 77 games with an average of 24.6 minutes per game.
The hope is that in a few years Noa looks like a potential all-star level player. Will he be? Who knows. Does he have a better chance of getting there over players taken after him (Kasparas Jakucionis, Yang Hansen, Joan Beringer, Walter Clayton, etc.)....that's debatable. However, I bet all those players will contribute more this year, and next, than Noa.
I've said this before, but the New Orleans trade is what the Bulls should've done (because I think it has the potential to get a player with star level potential), but that ship as sailed.
I say all this and I want Essengue to succeed because I'm a Bulls fan. Hopefully he shows potential in his next few games.