Nivek wrote:The Consiglieri wrote:Nivek wrote:Folks talk about league average as if that's an insult. I think Zeller will be better than that, but when I did draft research on 4-year production by draft slot, the third pick (at least according to PER) on average wasn't much better than average.
No, I talk about it as something that is not something for us to aspire for, but rather to settle for, if what we aspire for doesn't come to fruition. You shouldn't be aiming from the get go for mediocrity. If you are, why are you even competing? What's the point of having a team in the first place? I always assumed it was building a champion, and aiming low is something that never gets you there.
I agree with you on what the goal is -- or should be, at least. I don't think the Wiz front office has that goal. I think they view it as unrealistic unless they get lucky and a superstar falls in their lap. Metaphorical lap, of course.
I don't agree with the notion that Zeller is going to max out at average, though. Even in this year's draft there are a number of players who could make really terrific pros if they put in the requisite work. I view Zeller as one of those guys. I think his floor is higher than some of the others because he's already demonstrated a good work ethic.
Aldridge had a pile of scouts and exec's comment on him:
"......For much of the season, Zeller was projected as a high Lottery pick, considered by many to be the best running big man in college basketball. But Zeller's stock has slipped a little in the last month or so, despite being named a second-team all-American.
He had a nightmare game against Syracuse in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament, making just three of 10 shots as Syracuse's big men took turns blocking Zeller any time he tried to drive through the Orange's zone. It left a few NBA types wondering if he could score consistently in the paint in the pros when the game becomes a halfcourt affair.
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"I really like him, and I still do like him," an Eastern Conference general manager said. "But I can see where his stock has fallen. He's a hell of a complementary player. If he's your third big, fourth big down the line, you've got a real good complementary player. But we're talking about a lottery pick, right?"
The 20-year-old Zeller, who was eighth nationally in PER (30.93) last season, has more than his share of fans, too.
"He's not a savior, not a star," another Eastern Conference executive said. "But if you look at supply and demand, and players that are 6-10, 7-foot, and internationally, there aren't that many of them. He grades out pretty well. He doesn't have great hands or great length, but at this stage, as a second-year player, we like him."
Said a Northwest Division scout: "What he's good at is if he gets the ball 10 feet from the basket, turns and faces. Now he can beat them off the dribble either way. I think he's a better face-the-basket player than back-to-the-basket player."
Another veteran scout was also intrigued by Zeller.
"He can pick and pop," the scout said. "He's never going to be a star. He makes free throws, he can run like the wind. He's a good player. Wherever he goes, you're going to get a good player. I think he can be a starter, if he's your fourth or fifth best player, depending on the other three or four, he's good enough. He can start. Now, maybe not tomorrow, but in a couple of years? Maybe."
Zeller will have to show he is at least familiar with the NBA 3-point line; he only attempted two threes all season for the Hoosiers.
"Can he go outside?," a Pacific Division executive asked. "There's a guy who, he's not a five. He's going to have to play four. And they never did play him on the perimeter. Even though in warmups he shot it from the outside, I never saw it [in a game]. I'm not sure he's as good as his brother [Cavaliers rookie Tyler Zeller], to be honest. He might be in the long run, but right now, he really scares me. He's got good footwork but I'm really afraid of him ... he can't go up over guys and finish, and he's always off balance."
But if a college player with a similar style -- like the Pacers' Tyler Hansbrough -- can find a home in the NBA by playing hard and running the floor, so can Zeller.
"There's not a whole lot sexy about this kid," one executive said. "Just meat-and-potatoes basketball. He's going to rebound in position, but he's not an animal. He's a solid rotation guy. If he's your starter you either have a hell of a team around him or you're not very good......"
For me, what's described, and what I watched was not good enough. I know he got a top of the line combine trainer so he could score through the roof during testing, but so what, what is he exactly, a 4th or 5th best guy on a good or great team? A guy who can't play in the paint at the next level. A guy who according to the scouts Aldridge talked to, was ranked behind both Bennett AND Olynyk, pre-combine? That's somebody I have zero interest in drafting other than via a trade down, and even then I probably wouldn't do it, because the other piece wouldn't make it worthwhile unless it was an unprotected '14 pick from a team we all knew was going to suck next year.
I think he has a chance to be average maybe even above league average next year, but I also think there's a lot of potential that he could be a near flat out bust, a bench player w/not quite the tools to start at the 4 for a legit good team, and I don't see any point in that. From what I saw watching him, I saw a guy who has major limitations, and no chance at playing the 5, or being a strong weapon inside as a 4. I think we can do a lot better. I'd grab Oladipo before him even w/the duplication of talent, because at least with Oladipo, I see the talent, the D, and the athleticism to be a legit weapon even if his offense his junior year ends up being a mirage. Zeller? If things go wrong with him, he's just a big who can't go inside, can't really play D, or hit the boards that well, and can only shoot. He could have a role, but for owning the 3rd pick, that's a pretty ghastly return. I'd definitely rather aim higher with Oladipo, Bennett, McLemore, hell even Len, and even a lower upside guy like Porter than at that (although Pelton has argued that Porter has more upside than many seem to think).