DCZards wrote:While I don't disagree with those who say that coaching and the Zards mgt. deserves some of the blame for lack of development of Ves, Seraphin and Singleton, I'm solidly in the camp of those who argue that a player's development/improvement is more on them than it is on the team or coaches.
Good organizations draft well even when they pick late
because they know how to develop raw talent. Serge Ibaka and Kawhi Leonard were totally raw talents when they were picked. Kenneth Faried is still very raw. But their organizations are smart and knew what they had to do to develop those players and see that they developed confidence and thrived. Kawhi Leonard in particular is interesting--he dramatically improved as a shooter once he saw major minutes with the Spurs, his confidence level went through the roof. Vesely has gotten dramatically WORSE at shooting since he's come here. He actually shot mid range jumpers in Serbia and played SF overseas! Now he's terrified to shoot from outside four or five feet and has no confidence and that is death to any shooter. You can blame management for that, especially Wittman. Wittman yanking him and then burying him for a month after he missed a shot was pretty much the worst thing a coach could do. A good coach does not focus on makes and misses for any player, much less one who is struggling to find rhythm and confidence. He did it with Singleton too, who actually came into the league with solid range out past 17 feet.
Wittman just doesn't know how to coach raw young players. He doesn't know how to help big men learn to shoot. He doesn't have the patience nor the willingness to do what it takes to develop a raw young player. He's the coach who made Kevin Love stop taking 3s. He's just not very bright nor forward thinking.
Player development should be a top priority for any coaching staff and any organization. The person doing the drafting should have clear plan for how to develop X player and how to get him a role for the team before he drafts him. Otherwise that player will probably bust. We fired Flip soon after we drafted Ves and Singleton and I think Wittman had no idea what the plan for those two was so he just stopped using them once he got a few veterans to play instead.
DCZards wrote:And I definitely don't want the Zards to make a draft day decision--like picking over Zeller over Len--because of the lack of development of Ves, Seraphin and Singleton. Len has way more upside than Zeller, imo, and I say we take our chances that he can realize that potential in a Zards uni.
Perhaps Len has way more upside than Zeller. But Len also has a long way to go before he's even as good as Zeller is today. Focusing on Len's abstract upside based on X, Y, and Z measurements his how you lose sight of the forest through the trees. Zeller is simply a much better basketball player than Len and has been since day one.
And Len isn't an assertive player either. He's not going to make his own hay and force Wittman to use him like
far more aggressive and confident players like Zeller and Porter and Bennett would.
If Zeller was a total stiff, then upside alone might be enough to sway me in favor of Len. But Zeller is a terrific athlete for his position, is a legit 6'11-7' tall, and has a great deal of upside too.
DCZards wrote:I know some folks are down on McLemore, but if I'm picking second he's my guy. I think he has the potential to be an all-star. While the Zards don't need a starting shooting guard, McLemore may be too good to pass up, imo.
Yeah you have to take McLemore second because he's the consensus second pick. I think every GM in the league probably has him first or second with Noel in the other spot. Ignoring the consensus BPA to reach for someone else is usually a really bad idea. But that doesn't mean I'd feel good about picking McLemore second. First, he's not a starter for us, so there is that. Second, he's got some intangible and age question marks that should give teams pause. He's a passive player and he's a 21 year old freshman who did nothing before this season. I was a senior in college and only a few credit hours from earning my degree when I was his age. Third, he's got skill set deficiencies. He's not a creative ball handler with a bunch of set up moves, he has some problems changing directions and pace, doesn't have a hesitation game, doesn't take the ball all of the way to the rim, can't attack multiple defenders with his dribble.
He's a freakish athletic talent with a perfect shot yet somehow he just isn't a can't miss player. Like OJ Mayo. I think he'll under perform for his draft slot just like Mayo did. And I think the team that takes the "low upside" big man in Zeller instead of McLemore will be better off, just like Minnesota was when they traded Mayo to Memphis for Kevin Love.