Severn Hoos wrote:CCJ, you know how much I love the diamond-in-the-rough stories, the little guys from little schools who make it to the show, and all that. Thing is, we also have to be realistic that those guys can be significant players at the next level, but the odds are astronomical that they will be stars, especially not superstars.
Here are the colleges/high schools of the 2012 All-Star team members:
Syracuse
St. Vincent-St. Mary HS (OH)
Memphis
Marquette
SW Atlanta Christian Academy (GA)
Georgia Tech
Duke
Georgetown
Arizona
Arkansas
Kansas
Kentucky
Illinois
Texas
Oklahoma
Lower Merion HS (PA)
Wake Forest
St. Joseph HS (NJ)
Texas
Barcelona, Spain
UCLA
Santa Clara
Wurzburg, Germany
Paris, France
UCLA
Obviously, there are no more prep-to-pro guys coming out, but it's safe to say that those guys: a) were identified by the age of 18 as being stars in the making, and b) would have gone to a Duke or UNC or UK or whatever if they had gone to college. (Steve Nash graduated HS in 1992, so I hardly think his example is indicative of today's environment.)
Fact is, you're far more likely to get an All-Star drafting from overseas than you are from a US kid who was not recognized as a future star by the time he was 18.
So it's fun to find the Millsaps and Farieds and others - and I'm right there with you. But those guys will always be at best the 4th-8th options on championship teams. Sad fact is, your cornerstones simply have to be blue chippers these days.
Sev, I'm actually being dad right now--not obsessing over the computer. (Well, I'm in the library with one son.) I don't really have the time to respond to such a great post with the justice it deserves.
Here is all I have for you, real quick. What determines stars as much as ability is opportunity, IMO. When a player gets drafted has a lot to do with how soon that player plays. Where a player goes to school has a lot to do with when and if that player is drafted. Overseas impresses guys like Grunfeld. Big schools impress Chad Ford, John Givony etc, the most. Still, they know talent.
My thought about stars is advanced metrics and due diligence on their backgrounds can help you sniff them out, no matter where they go to school--unless they do go straight to pros.
Potential stars: Robinson, Tony Mitchell (most underrated), MKG, Beal, Sullinger (I've been underrating him out of fear of injury), Cody Zeller (better than Tyler and a potential multi-all star, IMO), Damian Lillard, Will Barton and a few I'm too preoccupied to come up with.
My point is you can tell with some of the smaller-school guys by their head-to-head with the big names, and/or their HS backgrounds. I was beyond sure about Faried by the way he mauled Parsons, Macklin, Cousins, the Morrises, Aldrich before he ever got to the NBA.
I missed on Almond because I didn't look closely enough at Rice's competition. I totally didn't think about his athleticism, or lack thereof. Same with Morrison and somewhat Redick.
The guy I really like in this draft in terms of star too low is Will Barton. Dude competes, wins, and is more than prepared to step in and be an NBA stud at SG. Tyreke Evans knows this and has said so.
All for now.