doclinkin wrote:nate33 wrote:fishercob wrote:Thanks for posting, key, and I agree with your assessment -- release is a little low (and he also brings the ball down much lower than he needs to), but there's a clear competence there.
While my clear preference remains for Porter, if he's off the board I think the Wiz could do a lot worse than Zeller at #3. No, he's not going to be a dominant defensive center, but I have a hard team seeing how he doesn't help a team offensively. It would be a low risk, low reward proposition.
If he were available in some sort of good trade down scenario, I'd consider it, especially if Porter is off the board.
Every time Zeller's name comes up, I keep trying to think of why he shouldn't go in the top 3 or 4, and I'm having trouble coming up with a good answer. He is a freak athlete. He was a very productive player in college. He is a winner. He is an extremely hard worker. He is skilled in the post and out on the perimeter. He plays a position of need.
Are we overthinking this? Why not just take him and be happy?
I'd rather Zeller over Bennett. I would just prefer to get him on a trade down picking something else of value along the way. If possible. But would not cry at all if we chose him.
To me at this point in order to not overthink things and select a player one criteria of evaluation is to ask myself: "Could they play for the Spurs?"
Not 'could Popovich et al make a player out of them?' -- though Wittman is in the Popovich mold and will sit a player who does not defend, we lack the will to use the DLeague as a resource and lack the infrastructure to train new players.
But: could they step on court and play for Pop TODAY.
Here's the list:
1. Noel. In a limited role, yes.
3. Porter. No question. In a Danny Green role without the early struggles. Thus better upside.
5. Oladipo. Bruce Bowen style. yes.
7, 8. Burke, maybe, McCollum, yes.
11. Zeller of course. Gives good effort at both ends, high IQ, nice size for the position.
12. KCP. maybe.... He's a role-player with an NBA position: hits the 3, hits jumpers after motion, rebounds well for the position. I think I like him more than Pop does. He'd see DLeague time unless he figured out team D fast. But if you rebound, defend and hit the 3 you can play for Pop. He'd work his way back. But maybe = no.
13. MCW. Maybe.... no. He needs to shoot to play for the Spurs though. So no.
17. Olynyk. In a Bonner role.
18. Mason Plumlee. Absolutely. Plumlee is a typical Spurs pick. Overlooked solid role player, unexciting but plays a needed role. Longtime starter from a great NCAA program that teaches fundamentally sound smart ball. Yes.
20. Gorgui Dieng. Yes. Passes well too. Though his positional defense is not as good as it could be, he occasionally allows players to blow by so that he can shadow them for a block from behind, he's smart enough to grasp the Spurs system quickly and captain the defense whenever Tim can't go.
24. Bullock. Same reasoning as Mason Plumlee but in that Bruce Bowen 3&D role. This year's Danny Green.
28. Isaiah Canaan.
29. Jeff Withey.
International players were all cut from the above list since they may well simply play overseas if selected by San Antonio. On the Spurs, any potential international Euro-players from Alex Len on down would be draft-and-season targets, but not necessarily brought over today, no matter how highly they were taken.
Splitter first came on the radar as a potential #1 overall selection at age 17 or so, back when barelyawake and I were on the ESPN boards. He fell because he inked overseas to a contract that held him there for a while The Spurs jumped at the opportunity to snatch a great talent with a surefire education in BBall. He was to play next to or behind world champion Marc Gasol, he could definitely learn to play with or behind Duncan.
In round 2 there are: Erick Green, Mike Muscala, Nate Wolters, maybe Solomon Hill. And DEFINITELY Arsalan Kazemi who adds the benefit of being an overseas prospect while he develops a ranged jumper.
I look at Andre Roberson as a Kawhi Leonard type project, playing well at both ends and rebounding remarkably, but needing his jumper fixed. Because of that he's a developmental-type project that Pop would develop well but I lack confidence in our ability to do so.
So yes, no matter the upside and potential, as a circuit breaker to enthusiasm I commonly fall back on the binary metric: Yes/No, Would the Spurs play them today? If No. I have to take a 2nd look at how much I like them and why.