Dat2U wrote:sfam wrote:I totally get people wanting Porter over Bennett, or even Olapido (although I really don't see why we would want to draft backups with the #3 pick, but that just may be me), but this whole business about Bennett not being a viable pick is silly. If the top scouts across the board are listing him in the top 5, he's certainly worthy of a lottery pick. You can make the case for drafting someone other than Bennett without going rediculously overboard.
Top scouts listed Hasheem Thabeet as a top 5 pick. Jan Vesely was a conscensous top 10 pick even if this board hated him. Scouts get it wrong. And they get it wrong alot.
I think it's wise to question whether Bennett is a viable pick at #3. I certaintly have my doubts.
It's not even about Bennett personally, it's the fact he's likely a tweener with a questionable motor & IQ. Damn right I'm going to question the validity of a top 3 selection.
Re: Thabeet, it seems personnel people overvalue size. Kind of a planet theory thing--only so many people this big that can move like this on the planet--although the guy doesn't always even have to be a great athlete to get over valued if he's huge.
I think they operate on the assumption that they can develop all of the skills later, and so they devalue extant skills.
I think it's a bad assumption. I think significant skill development only comes when the player is a self starter who puts in the work on his own during the summer because the NBA in general does a really poor job of teaching new skills and totally actualizing their talent. If you draft a low skill player because of his athleticism and upside, you had better be sure he's a fantastic learner and worker who will spend his summers in the gym with coaches he pays for on his own dime. Or else he's not going to magically develop. Most players are not like that, especially not early in their careers.
I would sacrifice a little athletic upside for a guy who already has a solid base of skills so that he can get on the court early in his career and develop an identity as a player and gain some confidence. Especially if he's a worker too. If they've got the right kind of personality, the players who have long careers often tend to change pretty drastically from start to finish. They get more or less athletic. They get whole different skill sets and play styles. Chauncey Billups comes to mind. Good creator off the bounce, great post game for most of his career. Then he loses his role as the primary point guard and ball handler late in his career and morphs himself into a spot up shooter.
So it's entirely within the realm of possibility that you could take Porter today and think his athleticism will limit him but then he'll grow craftier and more explosive and then making a living scoring off the dribble in a variety of ways. Or you can take Zeller thinking he can't score over top of people and then he gets so much stronger and more skilled that he becomes a beast inside the paint. Or that he can't shoot and he gets so good from range that it becomes his bread and butter.

















