Dat2U wrote:Mizerooskie wrote:Dat2U wrote:The idea of making draft decisions based on Trevor Booker's presence is laughable. We had this same argument this past draft involving Faried & Booker. Everyone said Booker is too similar to Faried. Nonsense. For all of Booker's benefits he's still most likely a backup PF. We need talent, regardless of position. Draft the best player available. Stop worrying about fit. If Robinson is the BPA then draft him and worry about fit later. If MKG is the BPA, who cares if effort guys like Singleton & Vesely were drafted a year? Just get the BPA and let everything figure itself out afterwards.
Of course it's not laughable. If there are doubts that a player will be any better than Booker, you don't take that player in the top 5 if you've got better fits in the same draft tier. Simple.
There's a reason the tier system is so popular for NBA draft boards. It's the nexus of BPA and need-based drafting. With limited rosters, you can't merely draft the BPA all the time.
Draft disasters happen when players are taken a tier early (or wrongly put in a tier), like Greg Oden.
1. Were comparing Booker to top 5 picks. What?!?
3. Why are we so focused on one particular skill when we plainly need elite talent?
5. We don't have the pieces in place (elite talent) to worry about fit yet.
4. The only thing limited about our roster is talent.
5. Sorry if I'm being repetitive but basically what I'm saying is we need elite talent.
And Oden was in the right tier, he just could never stay healthy.
Well you're obviously ignoring the point. Again, draft tiers. Similarly talented players are put into tiers (e.g., players like Robinson and MKG). Teams then pick from those tiers based on need.
You've got a starting PF with a per of 16+ (29th in the league at the position, with the second-lowest usage rate in the top 30) in his second year. Your hodge-podge of starting SFs have a PER of 8+. What's the smarter pick? A tier 2 PF, or a tier 2 SF?
And Oden wasn't in the right tier. He was Sam Bowie. Durant put up ~26 and 11 per game en route to winning the Naismith award. He was in a tier by himself.




















