DEEP3CL wrote:Also I'm tried of hearing about Wiggins. The kid plays his high school basketball in Canada. Sorry but he hasn't faced top notch prep talent in my opinion. Plus I've seen the kid play......not that impressed. He's a gunner that won't be able to gun like that in the pros. Especially once defenses figure him out.
Couple of things:
1. Wiggins plays for Huntington Prep, out of West Virginia. Not in Canada. He's played against good talent, including Julius Randle. When he played Randle, the #1 PF and great player in his own right, he destroyed him. The guy couldn't score with Wiggins on him (took the assignment despite the difference in position), and Randle could not stop Wiggins; it got bad enough that Randle's coach pulled him and only put him back in the game when Wiggins was on the bench.
2. Reiterating point one, he's played against and with good talent. He's played against the #1 PF in this class, the #1 C in this class, the #2 PG in 2014, the #1 C in 2015, and numerous others. He's also competed in all of the major All-American games. Saying he hasn't played top prep talent is simply wrong; no one played more prep talent than he did.
3. Referring to him as a gunner doesn't match the descriptions I've heard from scouts. He doesn't really rely on his shot at all, and if anything tends to get complacent at times. Comparing him to Lebron, he has the same freakishly high athleticism, but has trades Lebron's raw power for a slightly quicker jump and first step. He is better shot than Lebron did at that stage, but Lebron was a far better passer (and the difference between Lebron's early shooting and Wiggins isn't that great).
4. Furthering point #3, quite a few great players match your description as players that the NBA defenses would "figure out." Jordan was supposed to be contained once defenders realized he was a bad three point shooter; he improved his 3PT shot. Kobe was an athlete with no perimeter; he improved. Lebron was a raw athlete without a jumper; he was highly efficient everywhere but from the FT line this season. The point is that many freak athletes come in without a well-rounded game, and the great ones adapt before they lose their athleticism.