theboomking wrote:Nivek wrote:Dat's right that the history of the draft shows that elite talent is typically found at the top of the draft. Draft history also shows that very good (and sometimes great) players can be found later in the draft. To be blunt: teams don't do a very good job of picking players. Virtually every year, players slip through the cracks and end up being a find for someone who's picking later in the draft.
That is probably true, but as you said, those players are usually good, not great, and what are your odds of finding those players?
Not bad, actually.

As I've continued researching the draft, I feel pretty good being able to identify players who are likely to be productive in the NBA.
Last year, it was Faried. Top 5 rating, went what, 22nd?
In 2010, there was Landry Fields (top 15 rating, went in the 2nd round); Jeremy Lin (mid-first rating).
The year before that, Lawson and Blair had good YODA ratings. So did Danny Green, who has played well since landing with the Spurs.
Most years, there's someone who rates highly in YODA, gets picked later and turns out to be good.
This year, I'd feel very comfortable picking Crowder later in the first round and expecting him to become a quality NBA player.
I think those good players are identifiable in advance of the draft.
"A lot of what we call talent is the desire to practice."
-- Malcolm Gladwell
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