pancakes3 wrote:nate33 wrote:Muhammed will probably pan out to be a decent bench scorer, but that's hardly what I want with the #8 overall pick in the draft.
As opposed to Burke being a decent bench guard with the 9th overall?
I kid. Burke is miles better than Shabazz and I support the 3rd guard draft strategy (as long as Porter is off the board). However, that isn't to say that Shabazz's ceiling is Nick Young. Given what Nick produced in college and in certain NBA seasons, it's fair to say that pressent-day Nick has underperformed to what his capabilities are.
Shabazz is much more focused and better at drawing fouls than Nick. Furthermore Nick is theoretically/empirically capable of a 17ppg season on 54% TS%. Per36, Nick is a career 18 ppg scorer on 53% TS% and a damn good defender to boot. The only problem is that he lacks focus and awareness - knocks that you can't lay on Shabazz lightly. I think the Nick Young analogy could hit, or it could undersell Shabazz due to the intangibles.
However at 8-9, he'll be a bit of a reach. Len, Zeller, and even Porter will be available at the tail end of the top 10. Shabazz is going to fall to the mid-teens, right around where Nick was drafted.
I don't think it's a fair argument to say Burke is much better than Shabazz. At college basketball I'd agree, but if the pro comparison was actually like that, Burke would be much higher up the draft board. The fear remains that Burke doesn't have some of the genetic tools necessary to be elite at the next level (the things out of his control: height, and athleticism), while Muhammad definitively has them. If Muhammad had the mentality of Burke, and if Burke had that genetic lottery of traits that Muhammad had, they'd be going 1 and 2 or vice verca. As it is, I don't think Burke is definitely a better player than Shabazz, and indeed I think it's actually more likely that Shabazz has the good or better NBA career than Burke. I just think if both pan out, and maximize their abilities, Burke would offer more, and be a more complete player.
At the end of the day this will be an interesting draft, a real interesting draft. It feels like a mine field of potential busts, and role players much like the 2011 draft, but even worse in some ways. For me, the most reliable guys in the top 9 to produce quality careers are probably McLemore, Noel, Bennett, and Muhammad. After that I'd go with the worker bee's with upside: Porter, Burke, Oladipo, and then the question marks: Len-will he develop, Zeller-is he able to compete at the next level, and McCollum-can he translate. Gary Harris is a confusing guy for me. I just don't know enough about him.