Negrodamus wrote:Jojothewhale wrote:PhilasFinest wrote:I do find it a bit worrisome that a kid thats supposedly going to be a superstar in the NBA and franchise changing player, couldn't do enough to even squeak his NCAA team into the tournament.
You really don't see a lot of these negatives in elite star players, especially early on against much inferior competition
I'm not even a big Simmons fan relative to others, but some of these criticisms are crossing over into the absurd.
Question the effort or the shot, absolutely. As far as the defense goes, he was terrible in their 2-3, for sure, but when put into more common NBA situations like manning up or guard a pick and roll, he looked much more passable -- and that's all you need if he can be as efficient as he has the potential to be on the other end.
As far as making the tournament, we really do have to keep in mind that he was a freshman (and therefore only had one chance) on a team that in no way fit his strengths, especially after Hornsby went down. It's not as if he joined a juggernaut either, as they were a 9' seed who lost 2 of their 3 best players. While we don't have recent examples of #1 overalls missing the tourney, we do have true stars who never played a tourney game. Let's look at these #1s and see if we're comparing apples to apples.
I'll use the last 9 years because that eliminates Bogut and Bargnani, which just gets messy. 3 went to Kentucky, 1 each to Kansas and Duke -- each of those guys could have missed the year and their teams still would have made the cut. Rose had a very solid Memphis team with a first team All-American CD-R, some solid NCAA level vet bigs, and an all-universe coach in Calipari. Oden had Conley, Daequan Cook, and a good Senior in Ron Lewis. I think we can all agree to ignore Anthony Bennett ever happened, since no one has ever mistaken him for an elite prospect.
Basically it comes down to Blake Griffin if you want to make the team success argument, but I would take Willie Warren over Hornsby as a college player and you add a pretty damn solid NCAA big in Longar if you include Griffin's freshman year. I would argue Griffin's skill set was much more conducive to carrying substandard talent than Simmons, while the latter is almost designed to scale more exponentially as you improve the team around him.
The lack of team success is not a positive, but I don't see how it's a death knell at all.
Why ignore Bennett? He at least took his mediocre UNLV team to the tourney.
Because Bennet has not ever been considered an elite prospect.
I think the better criticism is to go back and add guys that were considered potential stars but did not go 1st like Parker, Embiid, and Beasley to see where that gets you.