Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:The most likely picks from fourth-worst are #6 or 7.
Chances are slightly less than 50-50 the Wizards pick in the top-4. Expect a pick at #4, 5, 6 or 7. Be happy with a top-3 pick.
This feels like a Derrick Williams or bust draft. I believe trading the pick might be a way to go if a big is made available.
Actually, that's 5th or 6th as most likely. The chart starts with the number of ping pong balls, so the second number listed is the odds (.119, or 11.9%) of getting the 1st pick.
Not that it matters much, 5th-6th-7th will be pretty unappealing no matter what.
About 40% cumulative chance to get in the top 3. That's what's really critical. Those odds would have dropped precipitously if the Wiz would have pulled out one more win.
About 50-50 to go in the top 4 or 5-7.
Earlier in the tank process, I was fixed on getting into the 3rd worst record, far higher cumulative chance of getting in the top 4 due to the post-Lottery slotting. And with Sullinger, Barnes, Williams, Irving, Jones, top 4 would have been key to get a key contributor or prime trade bait (or both). With Sullinger, Jones, and possibly Barnes all out of the Draft, there's precious little difference between 4 & 7, IMO.
Best hope: Top 3 pick and Barnes comes out. I get that in a normal year Barnes (and maybe Williams) wouldn't be worth a top 3 pick, but it is what it is, and the team has to maximize the value of the situation as it presents itself. To me, that means taking one of those 2 guys, since the alternative is less likely to provide a greater value.
At 4-7, I guess I'd take Kanter if he's on the board, but probably look to trade the pick if at all possible.
"A society that puts equality - in the sense of equality of outcome - ahead of freedom will end up with neither equality nor freedom. The use of force to achieve equality will destroy freedom" Milton Friedman, Free to Choose