TylersLakers wrote:1) "you want a good PG not mediocre ones.."
Totally agree. Evidence that Russell is a good/great PG? I mean, do you know 100%, no we don't. It's possible, but not a for sure thing. I realize you could make the same case with Okafor, but I do know this about Okafor. He's a great offensive player and at the very minimum, he's going to be a very talented low post player offensively. Players with his type of offensive skill don't come around often and when they do and you have a chance at it, you have to be proactive and jump on it especially with the opportunity we've been given with moving up to #2.
And you don't think Beverly is a good PG? I think he is. Don't think Dragic is a good to great PG? I think he could start with us and be an impact player.
2) "Also Dragic is going to resign with the Heat."
Sure, if they pay him max money. Will they? I don't think he's a maximum calibre player and if the offers are similar between ours and Miami's, we know he's always wanted to play in Los Angeles. If he signs a maximum deal, I don't want him. But for 10-14M, somewhere in that range, I'm game.
I like the enthusiasm, but it's no sure thing that Okafor will live up to the hype either. I say this because I like both prospects. If Okafor turns out to have ok volume scoring on average efficiency with meh defense, sure that's a nice player, but it'd also make him not all that special or at least far from elite. In your world, Okafor is the next Shaq with great chance of signing Dragic while Russell has a good chance to be a bust with no chance of signing Gasol. Too much koolaid.
Kilroy wrote:Personally, I like the idea of pairing Oak with Randle... I think they could pick and roll teams to death and I like Oaks inside presence paired with Randles high post skills. I also think NBA level defense is a learning process for every player. So I don't think I'd let that deter me too much.
I don't mind the pairing either. Both Randle and Okafor would have to be consistent at making mid-range shots though, especially Randle. Okafor would get doubled and make a clean pass to Jefferson to hit a open shot or pass the ball out as the defense was rotating and the guards would get Jefferson the ball to make a basket. Randle can more than fill the same role Jefferson had since he's a far better player. There's going to be a 10 minute stretch where both of their minutes would be staggered anyways.
bah humbug wrote:Basketball is still a big mans game. Don't be fooled by steph curry taking advantage of Kevin durants absence this yr. and who's to say lebron (effectively a big himself) won't win this yr? Okafor has the best low post game of any college freshman ever. I hate when people say he has limited upside it just makes no sense. I get that people are worried about fit w randle, but these cats are young, defense can be taught if you have the physical tools (see Bynum), offense is much harder. Also what about Russell's fit w clarkson? Ppl on this board severely underrate clarksons potential. He has future all star written all over him, but he is ball dominant and that won't mesh w Russell. If Ur gonna hate on Okafor as a bad fit w randle, it cuts both ways w Russell/clarkson. Give me too really talented post scores over two talented ball dominant wings pls. Don't overthink yourself out of this Mitch. Go w the big. Only edge Russell has is that he is 0% chance to bust whereas Okafor has 5-10% chance of being a good, not great player.
But at the end of the day I'd rather take a shot where a guy has 50% chance to be Tim Duncan/25% chance to be 2011 Bynum/25% chance to be al jeff than a guy who has 90% chance to be Damian lillard/10% chance to be steph curry
Offensively, I think Okafor can be like Duncan which is really sweet, but he doesn't project to be the defensive player that Duncan is. By your odds, I'd take 90% Lillard. I don't say this to prop up either draft prospect, but more so because your post is full of jibberish.
SDChargers#1 wrote:People act like all Centers in the league are rim protectors, or that rim protectors are somehow necessary. They aren't. The heat went to 4 straight finals without a rim protector. Kevin Garnett was never a great rim protector. Shaq, etc.
Being a rim protector is VERY overrated.
Who's talking about rim protector? A big, especially a center, is incredibly valuable as a defender. KG was a world class defender. Marc Gasol is great at what he does. And why list Shaq? He was a rim protector since opposing players were scared to run into him.
DEEP3CL wrote:I don't get the fascination with taking a guard when you have a big with a great NBA ready post game. I think guys are too swayed by today's style of play. Truthfully it's a fad for this moment.
Ever stop to think why teams even went to stretch the floor / perimeter game anyway?
If was because of the lack of bigs who could draw a double team. Bigs became less and less talented as we approached the mid part of the decade.
The last two bigs that were suppose to be dominate were Oden and Bynum. Injuries derailed both of their careers.
But bottom line is that you don't pass on Okafor or Towns for guards you can find in every draft after this one.
The league evolved in such a way that there's a bigger payoff in taking 3's, getting to the line, and not taking long 2's. Even if the league had an extended golden age for centers til now, we'd still be seeing a shift to more 3 point shots and more ball movement which low post scoring, in general, does limit.