Comments so far are interesting. The fact is, some moves that seem "terrible" now and are used to make it seem like Grunfeld is a horrible GM, are moves that made sense at the time and are moves that other GM's would have made if they were in those positions.
In 2011, Vesely was picked where he was ranked and expected to go even on mocks. This was not a head scratcher or a reach.
http://www.draftexpress.com/nba-mock-draft/2011/He was the right pick at the time, over Biyomobo, Brandon Knight, Kemba Walker, and Fredette. All whom he was ranked over and based on need. As a glimpse into Vesely's profile, his weaknesses were glaring (shooting and taking care of the ball/creating his own shot) but those are not weaknesses that could not have been fixed. His strengths on the other hand were eye appealing and showed promise of an athletic freak of a big man with hustle and high upside.
"He rarely, if ever, was asked to go out and create his own shot on his own, seeing just 2.8% of his offense in isolation situations, which ranks 15th of the 18 players in this study, ahead of Malcolm Thomas and Matthew Bryan-Amaning, but nevertheless ranked as the 5th most turnover prone, coughing the ball up on 15% of his possessions.
By contrast, 25% of his possessions came in spot-up situations, which puts him near the top in this category after Robin Benzing (39%), Chandler Parsons (26.2%) and Justin Harper (25.5%).
He was not terribly effective as a jump-shooter, though, garnering .78 points per shot he attempted, 5th worst in this group—almost all of which in catch and shoot situations. On the other hand, Vesely's athleticism shines through with the way he was able to convert opportunities around the basket, shooting 74% from the field in these situations, first in this group.
Not surprisingly, Vesely ranks amongst the most effective finishers off cuts (3rd), offensive rebounds (2nd), post-ups (3rd) and in transition (6th).
He was also able to draw free throws at the third highest rate (on 19.4% of his possessions) in this study, trailing just Derrick Williams and Jimmy Butler.
If Vesely can shore up his ball-handling and perimeter shooting ability, he has all the makings of an incredibly versatile player.From DraftExpress.com
http://www.draftexpress.com/profile/Jan-Vesely-1402/ Blaming Ernie Grunfeld years later for drafing Jan Vesely and not skipping over 5 higher rated players to draft Klay Thompson is unbelievable and unrealistic. Most GM's in that situation would not have done that, so why expect it from Ernie?
Klay Thompson had weaknesses as well which could be argued as to why he didn't deserve to be selected higher:
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Thompson's 1.103 PPP on pick-and-rolls easily ranks first in the class (no one else breaks the 1.0 threshold), while his 1.15 PPP on spot-ups and 1.0 PPP on screens are both above average. Thompson is less impressive in isolations, where his 0.788 PPP ranks just 13th overall, unsurprising given his athletic limitations.
Thompson's 1.094 PPS on jumpers ranks third in the class, but his 9.1 jumpers per game is the most of any player, and the two players ranking above him in efficiency both take far fewer attempts (Jon Diebler at 5.4 and David Lighty at 4.1).
On the other hand, Thompson's limitations show in his ability to finish around the basket, where his 1.116 PPS ranks 12th overall.From DraftExpress.com
http://www.draftexpress.com/profile/Klay-Thompson-5490/ Again, easy to bash now 3 years later and looking at the unforseen but I highly doubt someone could use this as a way to define a GM as terrible. No one had a "crystal ball".
Trading away the 2009 #5 pick was not franchise crippling as many make it seem. Looked who was picked at 5. Rubio then Johnny Flynn at 6. Yes, Curry was picked at 7, but again how did it set the franchise back when we selected Wall the following year? Then Beal in 2012? Compare the backcourt of Wall and Beal with Curry and Thompson. Both are in discussions as the best backcourts in the league. Some give a slight nod to Curry and Thompson right now, but Wall and Beal are both younger and will only get better. Plus, Wall is a much better defender than Curry. Interesting article posted today on that very subject:
http://thebiglead.com/2014/04/23/john-wall-and-brad-beal-or-klay-thompson-and-stephen-curry-which-is-the-best-young-backcourt-in-the-nba/Many say all Ernie does is "clean up his own mess". Well that's what I want. A GM who realizes something isn't working out and is proactive in fixing the problem. Not a GM who is too arrogant to do anything because he wants to prove everyone wrong that his picks/transactions will work out eventually.