spearsy23 wrote:So we get pick 31-55 in next year's draft? Feels about right. no question he would have been worth a late first with pt.
Im not quite sure if you get the massive value difference in a late first and a 2nd round pick.
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spearsy23 wrote:So we get pick 31-55 in next year's draft? Feels about right. no question he would have been worth a late first with pt.
spearsy23 wrote:So we get pick 31-55 in next year's draft? Feels about right. no question he would have been worth a late first with pt.
spearsy23 wrote:In general early seconds are worth more than late firsts.
Bravenewworld wrote:spearsy23 wrote:In general early seconds are worth more than late firsts.
Are you serious?
How about you provide some examples of this.
Bravenewworld wrote:spearsy23 wrote:In general early seconds are worth more than late firsts.
Are you serious?
How about you provide some examples of this.
Podirk wrote:Bravenewworld wrote:spearsy23 wrote:In general early seconds are worth more than late firsts.
Are you serious?
How about you provide some examples of this.
It's a guaranteed (1st) vs a non guaranteed (2nd) contract
Since the 2nd rounder isn't guaranteed a second rounder can make more money (Abrines , if he ever comes over, will come over for ~ MLE opposed to around 1 mill if he had been picked in 1st round).
Spearsy can def elaborate better on this than me though.
Bravenewworld wrote:Podirk wrote:Bravenewworld wrote:
Are you serious?
How about you provide some examples of this.
It's a guaranteed (1st) vs a non guaranteed (2nd) contract
Since the 2nd rounder isn't guaranteed a second rounder can make more money (Abrines , if he ever comes over, will come over for ~ MLE opposed to around 1 mill if he had been picked in 1st round).
Spearsy can def elaborate better on this than me though.
He cant elaborate better on it.
There are situations where a 2nd might be more valuable to a team than a late first, that situation mostly being a complete roster and not wanting to add salary. But that is no where near "in general". Its a very specific scenario that we don't often see.
Podirk wrote:spearsy23 wrote:So we get pick 31-55 in next year's draft? Feels about right. no question he would have been worth a late first with pt.
If only Lamb could have beaten out one of
Deandre Liggins
Caron Butler
Derek Fisher
Andre Roberson
Lance Thomas
he would have got more playing time.
You'll say "Brooks / the organization hindered Lambs growth" but that's purely an opinion and can't be proven (thus I don't disagree with you).
Lamb has obvious talents, he just wasn't able to put them together in a manner that 1. resulted in playing time 2. Was absolutely better than who he didn't play over.
That said I was hoping to see what Lamb may do under Donovan (as opposed to Brooks), but that chance is gone.
bondom34 wrote:This is right. In theory it sounds like it makes some sense, but in reality doesn't. Teams have never paid to move from a late first to early second, but have done the opposite.
spearsy23 wrote:bondom34 wrote:This is right. In theory it sounds like it makes some sense, but in reality doesn't. Teams have never paid to move from a late first to early second, but have done the opposite.
As Kizz said, picks 25-35 all yield approximately the same results, while 31-35 have the advantage of unguaranteed salaries, no rookie scale and buyouts. Teams pay to move into the early 2nd more often than they pay to move into the late first. Maybe 'more valuable' is the wrong way to put it, but they yield the same results with added benefits.
bondom34 wrote:spearsy23 wrote:bondom34 wrote:This is right. In theory it sounds like it makes some sense, but in reality doesn't. Teams have never paid to move from a late first to early second, but have done the opposite.
As Kizz said, picks 25-35 all yield approximately the same results, while 31-35 have the advantage of unguaranteed salaries, no rookie scale and buyouts. Teams pay to move into the early 2nd more often than they pay to move into the late first. Maybe 'more valuable' is the wrong way to put it, but they yield the same results with added benefits.
But they don't. There aren't any recent examples I can think of where a team has paid to move from say 28 to 32.
bondom34 wrote:But they don't. There aren't any recent examples I can think of where a team has paid to move from say 28 to 32.
Kizz Fastfists wrote:bondom34 wrote:But they don't. There aren't any recent examples I can think of where a team has paid to move from say 28 to 32.
The Magic last year traded Afflalo for an early 2nd round pick instead of a late first round pick. Assuming the rumors of them being offered a late first were accurate. It really depends on what you want the pick for. Presti would consider an early 2nd more valuable because of his ability to use it on a draft and stash that he couldn't take at the end of the first round because they'd never come over. That isn't to say that #34 is more valuable than #19, but if your roster is pretty much set then #34 is more valuable than #25. I think if Presti would have been able to trade down instead of drafting Huestis last year he would have. He was in the worst draft spot under the current CBA. A spot where you can't take an elite European player in need of developing because if they develop they'll never come over for the late first round money and you can't get a college player that can help you, unless you get very lucky, that deep in the draft either.
bondom34 wrote:Kizz Fastfists wrote:bondom34 wrote:But they don't. There aren't any recent examples I can think of where a team has paid to move from say 28 to 32.
The Magic last year traded Afflalo for an early 2nd round pick instead of a late first round pick. Assuming the rumors of them being offered a late first were accurate. It really depends on what you want the pick for. Presti would consider an early 2nd more valuable because of his ability to use it on a draft and stash that he couldn't take at the end of the first round because they'd never come over. That isn't to say that #34 is more valuable than #19, but if your roster is pretty much set then #34 is more valuable than #25. I think if Presti would have been able to trade down instead of drafting Huestis last year he would have. He was in the worst draft spot under the current CBA. A spot where you can't take an elite European player in need of developing because if they develop they'll never come over for the late first round money and you can't get a college player that can help you, unless you get very lucky, that deep in the draft either.
But you can draft and stash a late first ad well, and other than that we just have vague rumors. I bet if Afflalo could have fetched a better pick he would, but Fournier was enough compensation. It just doesn't happen ever that way even if the theory sounds good.
spearsy23 wrote:bondom34 wrote:spearsy23 wrote:As Kizz said, picks 25-35 all yield approximately the same results, while 31-35 have the advantage of unguaranteed salaries, no rookie scale and buyouts. Teams pay to move into the early 2nd more often than they pay to move into the late first. Maybe 'more valuable' is the wrong way to put it, but they yield the same results with added benefits.
But they don't. There aren't any recent examples I can think of where a team has paid to move from say 28 to 32.
There are no examples of the opposite in the last three drafts either.
Edit: Went back to 2010 and the closest is 30+35 for 23+56.
Late firsts change hands much more frequently than early 2nd's for what it's worth. Rather that means they're more valuable or less depends on how you look at it. Maybe the best that can be said is that they're roughly equivalent in value.
spearsy23 wrote:bondom34 wrote:Kizz Fastfists wrote:
The Magic last year traded Afflalo for an early 2nd round pick instead of a late first round pick. Assuming the rumors of them being offered a late first were accurate. It really depends on what you want the pick for. Presti would consider an early 2nd more valuable because of his ability to use it on a draft and stash that he couldn't take at the end of the first round because they'd never come over. That isn't to say that #34 is more valuable than #19, but if your roster is pretty much set then #34 is more valuable than #25. I think if Presti would have been able to trade down instead of drafting Huestis last year he would have. He was in the worst draft spot under the current CBA. A spot where you can't take an elite European player in need of developing because if they develop they'll never come over for the late first round money and you can't get a college player that can help you, unless you get very lucky, that deep in the draft either.
But you can draft and stash a late first ad well, and other than that we just have vague rumors. I bet if Afflalo could have fetched a better pick he would, but Fournier was enough compensation. It just doesn't happen ever that way even if the theory sounds good.
At the least I think we can all agree that there is not a 'massive gap' between late firsts and early seconds.
Bravenewworld wrote:http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/25/upshot/why-late-first-round-nba-draft-picks-are-a-bargain.html?_r=0&abt=0002&abg=0
http://www.crabdribbles.com/nba-draft-over-the-last-15-years-a-statistical-overview/
The value of 2nd rounders, no matter where they are, are no where near even late firsts.
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