[Vine][/Vine]
Notanoob wrote:CBB_Fan, you are seriously underrated the athleticism of a number of those guys, and those who you aren't underrating are significantly different from Doug in ways that make the comparisons moot, IMO. Sharman, Unseld and Hayes are all pre-80's players. Rice, Miller, and Mullin are all more athletic than Doug by a decent margin. Nash, Bird, McHale, Parrish...I wouldn't call all of them unathletic in the same way as Doug, but they're all players on another level from Doug. Nash was at least fast, Bird/McHale/Parrish were all strong and I wouldn't call McHale or Parrish generally unathletic. McHale sometimes guarded SFs for Bird IIRC. Nash and Bird are generational passers, Doug can hang his hat on his shooting, but that makes him basically a role player like Kerr.
Hindsight is 20/20 though. Coming into the draft, were those guys considered players on a different level than Doug? Were they considered more athletic? It is okay to claim so after the fact, but the truth is that coming into the NBA they all had similar questions.
I'm not, I repeat
NOT trying to say McDermott is any of those players, I'm not making a comparison. My argument is not about McDermott, it is about the process of assigning labels. The problem is that we redefine those labels after players enter the NBA. Steve Nash? He's not unathletic, he's a generational passer. Bird? No, he wasn't slow, he was strong. We explain away the labels after the fact so that we look like we are batting a thousand, and that is the problem with using them.
Slow white guys are bad, unless they are good, in which case the label gets dropped. See, all slow white guys are bad! But that is no way to make a decision, because we don't have the luxury of hindsight in our predictions. McDermott is not athletic enough to score on a drive or defend a telephone pole, but he's isn't the type of player that needs the ball in his hands to score. Maybe that means he will be capable of scoring like old Miller or Allen, who were superb scorers even when their athleticism faded. Maybe he'll be another Mike Dunleavy.
There is no way to tell before he actually plays in the NBA, but the real analysis has to go beyond his skin color and footspeed and actually look at his game.
zronv7 wrote:The guy just looks very uncoordinated out there like he doesn't know what he's doing. Mid-late 1st round, I'm a big fan though and hope the best.
? McDermott has by far the best fundamentals of anyone in this draft. He has to, otherwise he would not get drafted at all.