So I'll blatantly steal from Dat and offer a truncated list of the top prospects in Tier format, with my own tweaks to the Tier definitions:
Tier 1: Multiple 1st/2nd Team All-NBA. i.e., Top 10 in the league overall, and not just as a flash-in-the-pan.
Tier 2: Multiple All-Star. Since there are 24 All-Star slots each year (though sometimes diluted by fan voting and injury replacements), this is roughly a top-25 player, or top-5 at his position. Again, multiple times, not a one-timer (sorry L-Boogie, but I'm looking your way right now)
Tier 3: Top 10-15 at his position. This puts him in the top half of starters, potential major contributor to a championship team. Top 50-75 players in the league at any point in time.
Tier 4: Solid starter. Maybe a 4th starter for a championship-level squad.
Tier 5: Fringe starter/solid bench guy. Rotation player.
Tier 6: 8th-10th man
Tier 7: Replacement-level player or below.
For reference, I would rate the current Wizards as follows, accounting for potential/projected level:
Tier 1: None
Tier 2: Wall
Tier 3: None (though McGee
could be here if he plays smarter)
Tier 4: McGee
Tier 5: Turiaf, Booker, Singleton, Blatche, Young, Crawford
Tier 6: Vesely, Evans, Mason, Lewis
Tier 7: Seraphin, Mack
Sorry, but I don't see Wall as the absolute best in the game, even in his best-case scenario. I think Vesely could move up over time, but not confident enough to slot him higher. Actually think Blatche should & could be higher, but the knucklehead factor knocks him down. And of course, this exercise goes to show just how bare the cupboard is. We so need to win that Lottery...
That said, here is my Tiered ranking of some selected prospects:
Tier 1Anthony Davis
Tier 2None
Tier 3Thomas Robinson
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist
Harrison Barnes
Jared Sullinger
Andre Drummond*
Bradley Beal
Tier 4Tyler Zeller
Jeremy Lamb*
John Henson
Perry Jones*
Terrence Jones
Tier 5Damian Lillard
Fab Melo
Jae Crowder
Jeffery Taylor
Tier 6Arnett Moultrie
Doron Lamb
Marcus Denmon
John Jenkins
Mike Scott
The guys with the * should be higher than they are, but intangibles drag them down, IMO. The UConn meltdown this year doesn't speak well for either Lamb or Drummond, and PJ3 is too passive to be a differencemaker. All 3 could change in the future, but this is where I would put them for now.
My takeaways are:
1) This may be the "easiest" #1 pick to make since Duncan. Not that Davis is the best overall prospect since Duncan, but that the gap between him and #2 is huge. Oden had Durant, LeBron had Melo, Bosh, and Wade (I'm choosing to forget Darko), Howard had Okafor (don't laugh - there were some apprehensions about Howard as a HS player, and Okafor had a sterling college resume - it wasn't as obvious then as it is now in hindsight.) Gotta get #1.
2) If it's not Davis, we really need one of the Tier 3 guys. (Although if it's Drummond, I would much prefer to trade the pick.) Right now, we'd be safe to get one if they all come out. If they start to announce they're going back to school, it's anxiety time.
3) If we get one of those guys, we should be realistic about what we're getting. I will admit I don't see in MKG what so many others do, so I am deferential to the consensus on him, and he could become a regular all-star (Tier 2). I wouldn't expect that of anyone else in the draft, including TRob. What we'd likely be getting is a solid starter, top half at his position. Instead of bemoaning that we didn't get an All-Star (or reaching to try and create one, like PJ3), better to add a building block and look for that elite player to pair with Wall from somewhere else.
Is it May yet?
"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