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2012 NBA Draft - Part III

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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#221 » by Severn Hoos » Thu Apr 19, 2012 7:36 pm

First off, monte and d'jim - thanks, though it did feel like a rant at the time. Very satisfying.

Dr Mufasa wrote:Severn Hoos, as someone who agrees with the BPA strategy...

It seems like your examples do support BPA over need. Jordan was the right pick over Bowie because he ended up being the BPA (by a LOL amount). Jordan would've been the right pick over Hakeem because he was BPA


First, thanks for the response. I can respect your position, but like DCZards, I think you're making the opposite point in the end. Take the bolded statement above. It's useless to say Player X was the BPA a decade or two after the fact. That kind of 20/20 vision is only good in hindsight, is no help for, say, the 2012 Draft.

Think of it this way: Go hop in your DeLorean and punch in May 1984. Then, go survey the 23 GMs in the NBA (I think there were 23 teams back then). Ask them who will be the BPA with the #1 pick in the 1984 Draft. You know what you'd get? 23 guys would say..... Olajuwon. And 23 guys would be wrong.

There is simply no way to know for certain that any given player will be the BPA - not even with Anthony Davis this year. So you have to be really sure that the guy you want is that much better than the alternative (especially if it's in a position of need) to take the "BPA."

Dr Mufasa wrote:A better example maybe is Rose vs Beasley. In 08 the Bulls had a solid PG in Hinrich and their biggest need was some extra scoring. So Beasley fit more. They took the better prospect in Rose and it set up a decade for them

An example people sometimes use to support need over BPA is Atlanta taking Marvin Williams even though they had SFs, and how he's been a 4th option he's whole career. To me that bust pick has nothing to do with picking BPA over need. Marvin would have limited talent no matter where he played. They tried to pick BPA but in reality the guy they took was nowhere near BPA

I think the downside of getting the best player at a spot when another good player is starting is very little. Having 2 of a good thing isn't a problem. It's a much bigger issue IMO to eg. end up with Araujo instead of Andre Iguodala just cause the team had Vince Carter and wanted a center. A bust <<<<<<<<<<< having 2 starting caliber guys at the same position

As for Robinson/MKG/Beal, they're ranked similar now but there's a good chance the best of that group and the worst will have a large gap between them 3 years from now. In the same way Greg Monroe and Demarcus Cousins separated themselves from similarly ranked Wes Johnson, Stephen Curry separated himself from Jordan Hill and Jonny Flynn, etc. So when someone says BPA it's saying "Let's try as hard as we can to land on the Curry/Monroe side instead of the Johnson/Hill one"


So, the examples you use (Rose, Paul, Deron Williams) are an MVP and 1st-3rd team All-NBA guys. Pretty high bar there. ;-) And yes, I do think that Marvin Williams is an example of a team taking the supposed "Best Player Available" when if they had been "shortsighted" and "drafted for need" they'd have wound up with Chris Paul. Sometimes you make the right decision and it doesn't work out, other times you make a bonehead decision and come up smelling like roses. But saying, in effect, "well those examples don't count because of course the other guy was the BPA" is a form of revisionist history. Just because a team was wrong in determining who they thought was the BPA (and in most cases, they were not alone) does not excuse the strategy. It just means that.... you never really know for sure who the BPA is until years later.

Now - I'm not advocating a straight need-based drafting. I agree that Araujo was a ridiculous pick, and was a confluence of drafting for need (pick a C) and the international feel that Toronto was trying to build at that time. So there we're on the same page - just a stupid decision.

The approach I prefer is one that we see a lot on this board, thanks to Dat and others. Group guys into tiers. Never drop a tier to reach for a guy based on need. But within the tier, you should absolutely consider "Fit" - mental approach, team needs, type of system, etc.

I think most of us have Davis all alone in the top tier. Take him #1 and don't look back.

I actually skip a tier in this draft, because I don't see any sure-fire multiple All-Star guys out there. So in my ranking, we drop to tier 3, where I have Beal, MKG, Robinson, and maybe Sullinger (emotional tie, perhaps, but still waiting on the combine results).

Within that tier, I absolutely take Beal and MKG before Robinson & Sullinger, based on the current roster. Might Robinson be a shade higher in some absolute metric of "BPA"? Sure, it's possible. But unless you think he'll have an MJ/CP3/DRose type impact, then I don't see how those other examples come into play. So take the guy who is really the "Best" for your team - Best Fit, Best chance to move the team to the next level, etc. Right now, I lean towards Beal with MKG second.


[Coda: I understand that rebounding is a need, and so can see how some would say that drafting Robinson is in fact good from a Fit/Need point of view. I just think that the incremental benefit you'd get from drafting him will be offset by reduced PT from Seraphin/Nene/Vesely/Booker/J. Singleton. You'd lose some of the benefit those guys bring to get PT for Robinson. OTOH, bringing in a Beal could add a great benefit, with the only diminished benefit/PT coming from Crawford going to the bench. Which might not be a bad thing at all.]
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#222 » by Nivek » Thu Apr 19, 2012 7:39 pm

I have a measure I've been playing with, which spits out 3pt specialists. The problem is that a lot of those specialists don't have draftable scores. So, I combined it with my overall measure and the results are kinda interesting. Here's the top 10 combined 3pt shooters with overall measure with draftable ratings:

1. Denmon -- top 5 rating
2. John Jenkins -- late 2nd
3. Kenny Boynton -- late 2nd
4. Lillard -- top 5
5. Kim English -- late 1st
6. Doron Lamb -- late 1st/early 2nd
7. Crowder -- top 5
8. Beal -- top 10
9. Reggie Hamilton -- late 1st
10. Mike Dixon -- mid-first

Several good shooters the Wizards could actually get in the 2nd round, if the draft sites have pegged the thinking of GMs accurately. Including Crowder and Denmon.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#223 » by DCZards » Thu Apr 19, 2012 7:41 pm

Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:
Denmon's shooting is off the chain and he's a lot more athletic than most pure shooters. He is a small Gilbert Arenas. Next to Lillard, Denmon is potentially the best shooter in this draft. Beal is going to be a beast in time, but not right away IMO.



ccj, I have a different take on what to do with that top 5 pick than you do. I'm against trading down and passing on Beal who, as you suggest, may someday be a beast. I think the Zards would be far better off waiting on Beal to reach his full potential as opposed to drafting a guy like Zeller, who will be a nice player but is unlikely to get a whole lot better than he is now.

If Beal does turn out to be a beast and Wall improves his shooting, as I expect he will, the Zards will have one of the best, most physically gifted backcourts in the NBA in 3-4 years.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#224 » by fishercob » Thu Apr 19, 2012 8:01 pm

Severn Hoos wrote:The approach I prefer is one that we see a lot on this board, thanks to Dat and others. Group guys into tiers. Never drop a tier to reach for a guy based on need. But within the tier, you should absolutely consider "Fit" - mental approach, team needs, type of system, etc.

I think most of us have Davis all alone in the top tier. Take him #1 and don't look back.

I actually skip a tier in this draft, because I don't see any sure-fire multiple All-Star guys out there. So in my ranking, we drop to tier 3, where I have Beal, MKG, Robinson, and maybe Sullinger (emotional tie, perhaps, but still waiting on the combine results).

Within that tier, I absolutely take Beal and MKG before Robinson & Sullinger, based on the current roster. Might Robinson be a shade higher in some absolute metric of "BPA"? Sure, it's possible. But unless you think he'll have an MJ/CP3/DRose type impact, then I don't see how those other examples come into play. So take the guy who is really the "Best" for your team - Best Fit, Best chance to move the team to the next level, etc. Right now, I lean towards Beal with MKG second.


[Coda: I understand that rebounding is a need, and so can see how some would say that drafting Robinson is in fact good from a Fit/Need point of view. I just think that the incremental benefit you'd get from drafting him will be offset by reduced PT from Seraphin/Nene/Vesely/Booker/J. Singleton. You'd lose some of the benefit those guys bring to get PT for Robinson. OTOH, bringing in a Beal could add a great benefit, with the only diminished benefit/PT coming from Crawford going to the bench. Which might not be a bad thing at all.]


Well articulated. This is where I am. The notion that there's not "second tier" doesn't even really matter unless you're evaluating a trade offer. It's the second tier in this draft, and if we're drafting in that tier I go for the shooting guard first.

I have been hoping for a Wall-Beal backcourt for nearly a year...
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#225 » by WizarDynasty » Thu Apr 19, 2012 8:10 pm

I don't believe a third tier guy should ever be drafted in the top 3. We are better off going the Ray Allen route that Boston took when Green was traded to the Sonics. Much better value. 1st and 2nd tier player definitely should be drafted in top 4. Going for a third tier player doesn't pay off in the long run with a top3-5 pick.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#226 » by miller31time » Thu Apr 19, 2012 8:16 pm

fishercob wrote:I have been hoping for a Wall-Beal backcourt for nearly a year...


It's uncanny how well they are projected to mesh. Wall is a ball-dominant point guard who likes to get into the lane and either create contact or kick out. Beal is a good off-ball shooting guard who, if not presented an open lane by the defense, would rather place the ball back in the point guard's hands and get open through off-ball screens. Kind of the anti-Crawford, if you will. He's a great spot-up shooter which is something Wall has yet to play with throughout his short NBA career (unless you count sub-par teammates like Cartier Martin and RMJ).

And for the record, I'm completely in agreement with doc in his post about what we should do in the draft. If we're picking 1st, you take Davis without thinking twice, but anywhere past that, you trade down and select Beal, who I don't believe will be picked in positions 2 or 3, dependent on which teams are up.

And I want nothing to do with Drummond but that goes without saying.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#227 » by Chocolate City Jordanaire » Thu Apr 19, 2012 8:25 pm

DCZards wrote:
Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:
Denmon's shooting is off the chain and he's a lot more athletic than most pure shooters. He is a small Gilbert Arenas. Next to Lillard, Denmon is potentially the best shooter in this draft. Beal is going to be a beast in time, but not right away IMO.



ccj, I have a different take on what to do with that top 5 pick than you do. I'm against trading down and passing on Beal who, as you suggest, may someday be a beast. I think the Zards would be far better off waiting on Beal to reach his full potential as opposed to drafting a guy like Zeller, who will be a nice player but is unlikely to get a whole lot better than he is now.

If Beal does turn out to be a beast and Wall improves his shooting, as I expect he will, the Zards will have one of the best, most physically gifted backcourts in the NBA in 3-4 years.


You could be right on that. You will get no argument at all from me, for once, DCZ.

I just want a certain style athlete for this team and I want that athlete to be highly skilled and ready to contribute. It is going to take a 19 (by training camp) year old kid 2-3 years. I don't want to wait. Just because the backcourt is physically skilled, that doesn't mean they'll execute well in halfcourt any time soon. However, if Billy Donovan projects Beal to be a Ray Allen down the road, I'm wrong about him being able to execute well. That with Nivek's database thingy have me truly conflicted.

My gut tells me Tyler Zeller will be better than projected. Will Barton and Marcus Denmon will be much better than projected. Crowder will be as good as stat heads think.

So, my scenario about trading down only does so to get rid of Blatche and to improve the team right away; at the risk of missing out on a superstar, DCZ.

My plan epically fails if Beal turns out to be a superstar and the guys I like are run of the mill. OTOH I see the Wizards probably being a playoff contender next season -- easily a most improved team candidate. The guys I like can definitely play well at the next level, and they can do so right away.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#228 » by nate33 » Thu Apr 19, 2012 8:38 pm

CCJ, I think one of the recurring themes in your pre-draft analysis is that you are always looking for underrated guys who can outperform. While that's a great thing, it doesn't really solve our problem with having a high pick and no elite prospects to choose from.

Maybe you are right that Zeller is worth a top 4-6 pick and will be a steal at #9, but that doesn't help us if we pick 3rd. We need a guy who will be a steal at #3, a nearly impossible task.

Basically, it sucks to be the GM picking 2nd or 3rd in this draft. It's a no win situation.

And most trade down scenarios are easier said than done. If there is no consensus separation between picks 2-5, why would someone picking in the 5-6 range give up much to move to #2?
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#229 » by Induveca » Thu Apr 19, 2012 8:56 pm

If we get the #5 or something equally horrible, I'd happily take Crowder. He's my Faried/Millsap/Blair guy who will fall to #20 and teams picking top 10 will feel foolish passing on him.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#230 » by WizarDynasty » Thu Apr 19, 2012 9:04 pm

i am going to take the hated position but if we have the second pick and we don't trade for under 30 non injury history wing player that has made the all nba team at least once in his career, i have have a good feeling it will be harrison barnes. For most teams, Harrison Barnes isn't a second tier player, but barnes on the wizards is a beast.
He compliments wall better than any player in this draft, high basketball IQ, great bulk, decent but not elite first step, decent standing reach for a sg/sf, outstanding lateral agility for a sg/sf and he's got the drive to get even better. He is also definitely a legitimate minimum second option scorer on the wizards and will probably turn into wall's best friend for years to come. Basically Rondo's Paul pierce. I know it an unpopular position but so is the notion that Drummond becomes a 1st team all nba player after three season with Nene and he picks up the championship reins as Nene starts hitting his permanent injury down fall.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#231 » by Dat2U » Thu Apr 19, 2012 9:12 pm

nate33 wrote:CCJ, I think one of the recurring themes in your pre-draft analysis is that you are always looking for underrated guys who can outperform. While that's a great thing, it doesn't really solve our problem with having a high pick and no elite prospects to choose from.

Maybe you are right that Zeller is worth a top 4-6 pick and will be a steal at #9, but that doesn't help us if we pick 3rd. We need a guy who will be a steal at #3, a nearly impossible task.

Basically, it sucks to be the GM picking 2nd or 3rd in this draft. It's a no win situation.

And most trade down scenarios are easier said than done. If there is no consensus separation between picks 2-5, why would someone picking in the 5-6 range give up much to move to #2?


:clap:

To go through this miserable season and only have Tyler Zeller to show for it would be an epic disaster.

Zeller may very well have a productive rookie season but CCJ's impatience and preference of finding undervalued ROLE PLAYERS in the draft doesn't help a rebuilding team reach long term goals.

We don't need a polished rookie like Zeller to improve. Internal improvement of Wall, Seraphin and others along with vet acquisitions like Nene & Singleton should create a good deal of optimism and potential success for next year without losing focus of long term championship aspirations.

The singular goal in this draft is to find the best piece that fits the long term goals of the organization. Dumping Blatche and acquiring a ready made contributor may satisfty an immediate desire but without elite talent, once again this is all an effort in futility.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#232 » by Nivek » Thu Apr 19, 2012 9:14 pm

Teams with multiple 1st round picks (and where they're projected to land):

- New Orleans -- 3, 10
- Cleveland -- 5, 25
- Portland -- 7, 11
- Utah -- 8, 13
- Houston -- 14, 17, 18 (also 40 and 44)
- Boston -- 20, 24

A lot really depends on where Washington has guys ranked. In my draft analysis, Crowder and Denmon should be top picks, but are rated much lower. Same for Lillard, though not as much as the other two.

If the Wizards land at 2, they could conceivably trade back with Cleveland to get 5 & 25, then use 5 to take one of Beal, Robinson or MKG (hoping someone will take Drummond goes in the top 4), 25 on Crowder (if Boston doesn't get him at 20 or 24), then get someone like Denmon, Fab Melo, Will Barton, Kevin Jones, Kim English, or John Jenkins at 32.

They could also use the 25 and the 32 to get Boston pick at 20 to get Crowder or Tony Mitchell from UNT.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#233 » by Dat2U » Thu Apr 19, 2012 9:15 pm

Induveca wrote:If we get the #5 or something equally horrible, I'd happily take Crowder. He's my Faried/Millsap/Blair guy who will fall to #20 and teams picking top 10 will feel foolish passing on him.


I like Crowder as an undervalued draft pick, but I would keep in mind what other teams think of him as well. I'd prefer to draft a top five talent and then trade back up in the 1st round of the draft to get Crowder if necessary. I'm thinking Crowder may be available as a late 1st round choice.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#234 » by Nivek » Thu Apr 19, 2012 9:26 pm

I agree Dat. I want Crowder on the Wizards, but if I can come out of this draft with 2-3 top 10 talents by exploiting how poorly other teams make draft picks, then that's what I'd prefer to do.

If the Wizards landed 5th, they could just use the pick to take the BPA -- probably Beal, MKG or Robinson. Then use 32 and 55 -- or maybe next year's 2nd rounder, or maybe just cash -- to get back into the first round for Crowder. Then buy a 2nd round pick in the 40s -- Houston will probably be selling given all the picks they have -- to take Denmon or Kevin Jones, etc.

Lots of options this year -- IF those draft sites have accurately pegged what GMs are really thinking about the players in terms of when those players will come off the board.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#235 » by nate33 » Thu Apr 19, 2012 10:01 pm

Nivek wrote:Teams with multiple 1st round picks (and where they're projected to land):

- New Orleans -- 3, 10
- Cleveland -- 5, 25
- Portland -- 7, 11
- Utah -- 8, 13
- Houston -- 14, 17, 18 (also 40 and 44)
- Boston -- 20, 24

A lot really depends on where Washington has guys ranked. In my draft analysis, Crowder and Denmon should be top picks, but are rated much lower. Same for Lillard, though not as much as the other two.

If the Wizards land at 2, they could conceivably trade back with Cleveland to get 5 & 25, then use 5 to take one of Beal, Robinson or MKG (hoping someone will take Drummond goes in the top 4), 25 on Crowder (if Boston doesn't get him at 20 or 24), then get someone like Denmon, Fab Melo, Will Barton, Kevin Jones, Kim English, or John Jenkins at 32.

They could also use the 25 and the 32 to get Boston pick at 20 to get Crowder or Tony Mitchell from UNT.

If we draft MKG or Robinson at #3, and Beal is on the board at #5, I'd definitely be willing to trade MKG/Robinson + #48 for #5 and #25. Then draft Beal. We'd have the #25 pick and the #33 pick available for late round steals.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#236 » by Dr Positivity » Thu Apr 19, 2012 11:03 pm

Severn Hoos wrote:First off, monte and d'jim - thanks, though it did feel like a rant at the time. Very satisfying.

Dr Mufasa wrote:Severn Hoos, as someone who agrees with the BPA strategy...

It seems like your examples do support BPA over need. Jordan was the right pick over Bowie because he ended up being the BPA (by a LOL amount). Jordan would've been the right pick over Hakeem because he was BPA


First, thanks for the response. I can respect your position, but like DCZards, I think you're making the opposite point in the end. Take the bolded statement above. It's useless to say Player X was the BPA a decade or two after the fact. That kind of 20/20 vision is only good in hindsight, is no help for, say, the 2012 Draft.

Think of it this way: Go hop in your DeLorean and punch in May 1984. Then, go survey the 23 GMs in the NBA (I think there were 23 teams back then). Ask them who will be the BPA with the #1 pick in the 1984 Draft. You know what you'd get? 23 guys would say..... Olajuwon. And 23 guys would be wrong.

There is simply no way to know for certain that any given player will be the BPA - not even with Anthony Davis this year. So you have to be really sure that the guy you want is that much better than the alternative (especially if it's in a position of need) to take the "BPA."

[other good stuff]



I think the difference here is how someone defines BPA. Seems you're seeing the term BPA as something set before the draft. Like Derrick Williams was BPA last year at #2 and that's why Minnesota took him despite how poorly he fit and from that point on his status as BPA is cemented. I see BPA as an unanswered question that a team has to guess at when making a pick. So if Klay Thompson ends up being the second multi-time all-star in the 2011 draft along with Irving (a double whammy for Minny considering how well Klay would compliment Rubi) and Williams is Marcus Fizer 2.0, I will say Klay was the BPA, it's just nobody knew it at the time. Likewise BPA at 2 and 3 in 2008 was Westbrook and Love. It's just MIA and MEM wrongly assessed BPA. So from this perspective the strategy would be "try and get the BPA"

I guess you could reword "draft BPA" to "give your best guess at who will be BPA".

I think the benefit of drafting for need would be related to player development being one of the things that creates BPA. Like I'm fairly certain that if Lopez went to 4th OKC and Westbrook 10th to NJ in 2008 they'd be better and worse players respectively. I could see Lopez being Marc Gasol/Roy Hibbert like and Westbrook Monta Ellis like right now. With that said I side against player development making up for massive player gaps. I don't think Bayless has Westbrook's career if he's drafted 4th or Jonny Flynn is a 20 PER player while Stephen Curry busts if they switched teams. I lean towards the player themselves still being by far the biggest reasons for succes or failure. And I'd also say what separates succesful player developments and not is more which team they're drafted to rather than what position they're on when they play. So the gap between being drafted by the Pacers or the Timberwolves means more than whether once on the TWolves, they're a starter from day 1 or coming off the bench (IMO). I think the "we need to give this guy 30mpg from day 1" attitude to player development is incredibly overrated. I love what the Pacers have done with prospects and their minutes for their rookies was 22 Granger, 21 George, 18 Hansbrough and 15 Hibbert, and none were immedaite starters. Thus even if player development is key, the player's position or fit on the team still might not make a difference - which would again suggest just giving the best attempt to get the best talent
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#237 » by Knighthonor » Thu Apr 19, 2012 11:27 pm

WizarDynasty wrote:i am going to take the hated position but if we have the second pick and we don't trade for under 30 non injury history wing player that has made the all nba team at least once in his career, i have have a good feeling it will be harrison barnes. For most teams, Harrison Barnes isn't a second tier player, but barnes on the wizards is a beast.
He compliments wall better than any player in this draft, high basketball IQ, great bulk, decent but not elite first step, decent standing reach for a sg/sf, outstanding lateral agility for a sg/sf and he's got the drive to get even better. He is also definitely a legitimate minimum second option scorer on the wizards and will probably turn into wall's best friend for years to come. Basically Rondo's Paul pierce. I know it an unpopular position but so is the notion that Drummond becomes a 1st team all nba player after three season with Nene and he picks up the championship reins as Nene starts hitting his permanent injury down fall.


http://swishscout.com/?page_id=429

interesting post here pal. He does seem like a nice fit. he can shoot. but the ball handle is the issue. Wizard need another handler that can take the shot from the 3 as well as take it inside.

but maybe thats asking for too much in Wizards current position.
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#238 » by WizarDynasty » Fri Apr 20, 2012 12:00 am

I think that Barnes has excellent foot strength and you see it on his step back k jumpers. Barnes has an alpha dog mentality and entire defenses in college were designed just to stop his pump fake dribble drive. Barnes has amazing body control and drive power. His jump shot will always force a defender to charge him and his ability to attack the rim with excellent body control and bulk is a tier two level talent for the wizards. I love the aggressiveness he shows attacking the rim. Since last year I said he reminds of Paul pierce long term. I think he is s better fit for us than Davis. I think Barnes is night and day a better fit for the wizards over mkg. Barnes is a player that Carries your team offensively and defensively each night especially next tho a guy like Wall. Barnes is a scorer, Wall is what i call break down point guard that punches holes in the defense but not a scorer. Barnes is a clean up man sort of like what Javale was on alley hoops when wall gets double teamed on a drive.
ONly thing better than a Barnes/Wall match made in heaven what Drummond will with 95 percent certainty transform into after three years with Nene. There is nothing scarier in the league than that him and Wall combined. Start racking up the championship Banners. I don't see another in the lottery with mentor that could get to Drummond like Nene can.
What I like about Barnes is that he is a player that is not only a great three point threat but when he drives into the lane, he has alot of bulk and size that is hard to knock off balance. Barnes is a serious offensive threat even after his intial shot is challenge. Complex defenses have to be designed to stop him and wall at the same time because not only can barnes attack from three point land, not only can he attack off pump fakes, but he has a beautiful post game like paul pierce. He also has the footspeed to guard shooting guards and you never have to worry about him getting posted up.
Barnes next to wall is a franchise player. He is a better fit next to wall over mkg, beal, and davis. His intangibles fit the wizards culture perfectly. if we come away with Barnes I think we have picked the player that for years becomes our version of paul pierce. Paul pierce for many years is the engine that carries the celtics when crunch time arises and we desperately need our paul pierce in Barnes. Barnes completely fits my description of the perfect save for the fact that is first step isn't elite but it is definitely effective considering that he has 230lb frame and will be one of the deadliest three point shooters in the league for years to come. Aggressive winner with a high basketball IQ and fits wall and the wizards perfectly. He needs wall just as badly as wall needs him.
Build your team w/5 shooters using P. Pierce Form deeply bent hips and lower back arch at same time b4 rising into shot. Elbow never pointing to the ground! Good teams have an engine player that shoot volume (2000 full season) at 50 percent.Large Hands
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#239 » by Nivek » Fri Apr 20, 2012 12:08 am

I'm a BPA proponent, but I think Mufasa makes a good point: sometimes it's hard to tell who the BPA is. At #1 this year, it's easy. After that, in my analysis, players are falling into groups with similar ratings. At that point, "best" can depend on lots of different variables. In this draft, Davis is in a class by himself. After that, I think Crowder is #2. I have MKG on that same tier, but the more research I do on him, the less I think he belongs there -- I think he's in with that next group with guys like Robinson, Beal, etc.

The point is that Robinson, Beal and MKG (for example) rate about the same. In that instance, picking the guy who's the best fit makes a lot of sense. It would be idiocy to be sitting at #2 and take Perry Jones because the team "needs" a SF. Because he's rated a few tiers away.

However, let's say that a tier ends at 7 players. If I'm picking 7th, I'm not going to reach into that next tier down for that selection. I'm going to pick from that higher tier, even if there's only one guy left, even if I might already have a guy on the roster who can fill that need. (Well, really what I'd be trying to do there is trade out of the pick, but assuming I couldn't do that right away, I'd pick the guy I think is best.)
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Re: 2012 NBA Draft - Part III 

Post#240 » by Nivek » Fri Apr 20, 2012 12:09 am

WizarDynasty wrote:I think that Barnes has excellent foot strength and you see it on his step back k jumpers. Barnes has an alpha dog mentality and entire defenses were designed just to stop his pump fake dribble drive. Barnes has amazing body control and drive power. His jump shot will always force a defender to charge him and his ability to attack the rim with excellent body control and bulk is a tier two level talent for the wizards. I love the aggressiveness he shows attacking the rim. Since last yearr ago I said he reminds of Paul pierce. I think he is s better fit for us than Davis. I think Barnes is night and day a better fit for the wizards over mkg. Barnes is a player that Carries your team offensively and defensively each night especially next tho a guy like wall. wall entire game is based on setting up pure shooters perimeter shooters and Barnes game odds based on knocking down the jumper after a pump fake but also attacking the rim Paul pierce style. These two walk and Barnes asst a mtch made in heaven.


You have officially become a parody of yourself. Congratulations.
"A lot of what we call talent is the desire to practice."
-- Malcolm Gladwell

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