Edit - Doc beat me to it. I would have beat him, but a telemarketer got to me. Hmm, his voice sounded like Doc's.

Moderators: LyricalRico, nate33, montestewart


Severn Hoos wrote:When I look at the current crop of All-Stars, I see three types (excluding Internationals):
1. HSers who made the jump straight to the NBA (LeBron, Dwight, KG)
2. One-and-doners (Rose, Durant, Love, Melo, Bosh)
3. Guys who stayed 2-4 years in college (Duncan, Griffin, Wade)
pancakes3 wrote:Severn Hoos wrote:When I look at the current crop of All-Stars, I see three types (excluding Internationals):
1. HSers who made the jump straight to the NBA (LeBron, Dwight, KG)
2. One-and-doners (Rose, Durant, Love, Melo, Bosh)
3. Guys who stayed 2-4 years in college (Duncan, Griffin, Wade)
not to be snarky but doesn't this break down to: "there are all stars to be found, regardless of years played in college, so we can't dismiss players one way or another" ?
and as edwood reminded us, there is no surefire way of predicting success. it's all one big craps shoot.
fugop wrote:Blake Griffin's freshman year was also not indicative of the player he would become. He posted decent numbers, 15 and 9, but nothing like his sophomore year.

doclinkin wrote:nate33 wrote: The worst case scenario is Barnes at #5
Clearly you haven't been a Wiz fan for very long.
One need only read from the book of Ji to understand that this team will go on a late season run as veteran squads begin to falter from the shortened season and decide to rest their legs for the playoffs. In an attempt to showcase Dray for draft day trades we unearth him from the bench and the lazy groundhog smells the familiar April air, shakes off the sloth from his long slumber and begins ballin like an allstar as he usually does. The Wiz' youth pep and vigor will undo all efforts at a proper tank as we leapfrog three four spots in the standings, then on lotto day watch as we're jumped by the '9th seed' Knickerbockers who slid in the standings when Jeremy Lin suffered a mild temporary eye injury from media overexposure. Wiz pick 8th. Perry Jones!
BanndNDC wrote:and at 6 we have Sullinger. So i guess that is our worst case scenario. which is a little better option then last year's worst case scenario - which happened. but there is also the possibility of the 3 years ago worst case scenario which we made worse when we assumed we'd get harden traded out early and could have gotten rubio.
my pessimistic top 3 (right now) is robinson, barnes, sullinger. the 1st two provide strong skills we dont have and the other provides good skills we dont have.
ive been leaning towards barnes under the assumption that we could overpay and get illyasova but it is never good to make assumption with grunfeld in charge.


dobrojim wrote:I'm not sure anyone really thinks that. It's just that if you're dreaming
about the ideal PF, the guy is probably 6-10 or bigger in addition to
being a stud athlete, strong, quick with great hops and hands.
DIdn't Griffin actually measure out under 6-9?
I'd say 6-9 is fine as long as the guy doesn't have alligator arms

dobrojim wrote:I not clear on exactly who is really being discussed here.
Sully and less so TRob are shorter than the ideal PF.
Meh. Either could turn out to be solid NBA players.
Or perhaps not. The fact that they are shorter than
one might dream for is clearly part of the question
about their respective ceilings. This is not an unreasonable
point of view.
pancakes3 wrote:I just want to ask why people think 6'9 is too short to play PF in the league. Both Robinson and Sullinger are listed as such.