ChrisTheFuturePaul wrote:Dont sleep on Julian Wright, I think hes gonna come up huge as Peja declines in New Orleans
Yeah, but they really screwed the pooch by not taking my boi Big Al
Moderators: Duke4life831, Marcus
-bob- wrote:The Hornets aren't exactly kicking themselves passing on a soon to be 25 year old low% chucker for JW.

Smills91 wrote:You gotta give each class at LEAST 3 years before you can fairly evaluate who should have gone where, and even then that's still a VERY small sample size.
gswhoops wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
Ditto.
The whole concept of this thread is flawed because the 5-11 guys contain a lot more high-upside projects...no one expected guys like Yi, Wright, Hawes etc. to be studs in their first season. With the exception of Thad (who has been surprisingly good for a 19 y/o) all of the guys who went 12-17 were mostly NBA-ready types, guys with a few years of college under their belts who LOGICALLY should have better rookie seasons then the college frosh.
Liqourish wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
I disagree. Al Thornton/Thad Young weren't expected to be good right away, Stuckey wasn't even on most peoples radars and when the news broke about Dumars liking the kid, people thought he was making a mistake by "reaching" for him.
Yi was expected to dominate right away (at whatever age he is) and Noah/Brewer were coming off back to back national championships. Acie Law was highly regarded and thought of as NBA ready.
Maybe it's too soon to judge the draft class after one year... but this theory of NBA readiness is just wrong.
Liqourish wrote:Rodney Stuckey, Al Thornton and Thaddeus Young made the NBA All-Rookie teams. None of the 6-11 draft picks were selected.
Cruel_Ruin wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
So? Stucky and Thornton were more NBA ready, but they don't have the upside of Hawes/Wright/Noah. The exceptions were Young, who was surprisingly good at 19, and Brewer/Law, who were surprisingly bad.