http://www.sacbee.com/kings/story/18975 ... =Kings/NBANBA teams scope out draft prospects in Chicago
The NBA's Be-Careful-What-You-Wish-For event began here Wednesday, when representatives from around the league came on the scene that has changed so much since the last time around.Predraft camp – which relocated from Orlando, Fla. – no longer includes the playing of basketball. After years of complaints from teams that the elite prospects hardly ever attended, the element that kept them away – the scrimmage – was removed, and the cast of characters is almost full again.
Oklahoma's Blake Griffin, the consensus No. 1 pick, is here like most of the big-name prospects for the June 25 draft in New York. He will be weighed, measured, asked to jump and perform agility drills. And he will be interviewed, which is perhaps this event's most relevant aspect in its current structure. Teams can request 18 interviews, as they try to learn more about each player's mental makeup while conducting the session in a hotel room. Fellow top-tier playersHasheem Thabeet (7-3 center) of Connecticut, Arizona's Jordan Hill (6-10 forward), Arizona State's James Harden (6-5 shooting guard), Memphis' Tyreke Evans (6-6 point guard-shooting guard) and Syracuse's Jonny Flynn (6-foot point guard) also are slated to interview with the Kings. Among the lesser-elite requested to be interviewed by the Kings, Virginia Commonwealth's Eric Maynor (6-3 point guard), North Carolina's Ty Lawson (5-11 point guard) and Arizona's Chase Budinger (6-7 swingman).
The event itself is a must for team executives, if only because they must maximize the draft system. Teams are allowed two workouts per player; predraft camp does not count as one. Group workouts (multiple teams watching prospects in a workout) also are exempt, as long as teams observe and do not interview players. "It's another look (at the players), and it's also a chance to interview players while you're there," Petrie recently said. "Some of it will be a duplication of what we do with our own workouts."