kron100 wrote:Dont even go comparing Sab to Hansbrough, Sabonis is all about his buisness.
stop trolling it's annoying.
Moderators: DG88, niQ, Duffman100, tsherkin, Reeko, lebron stopper, HiJiNX, 7 Footer, Morris_Shatford
kron100 wrote:Dont even go comparing Sab to Hansbrough, Sabonis is all about his buisness.
JJ From Deep wrote:kron100 wrote:If we pick 10th i think we have at chance at Sabo
A chance? I don't even see him being picked in the lottery at all, he's closer to an 18-20 range selection
kron100 wrote:I'm not even sure Skal is worthy of being a 1st rounder let alone 2nd
Tortiglioni wrote:kron100 wrote:I'm not even sure Skal is worthy of being a 1st rounder let alone 2nd
And Sabonis is a top-10 prospect...OK, good to know.
BoyzNTheHood wrote:S.W.A.N wrote:BoyzNTheHood wrote:
I have to agree with you here. Luwawu is not special by any means and taking him at 9 would be safe, but mediocre. This year we have a chance to truly swing for the fences for a guy ranked in the lottery. It's hit and miss, but you don't win championships with mediocre players. If I'm going safe at 9 I'd take Taurean Prince every time over Luwawu. Anyways, the point is to swing for the fences. You can't steal a base unless you don't fear being thrown out. Sure, Thon Maker or Skal Labissiere might be out of the NBA at the end of their rookie deals, and Luwawu might be a quality defender on a playoff team, but there's also the chance that Thon/Skal become defensive, shot blocking, floor stretching bigs while Luwawu is still just that solid defender. Screw that. You don't win championships by being safe and mediocre. Go hard or go home.
I'm not so sure Luwawu is mediocre. Excellent athlete, 3 point shot and good defender and excellent frame. I think his potential goes way beyond being just a quality defender.
The thing about Thon and Skal it they haven't shown anything yet. After combine and workouts I may warm up to them but right now they are about as Bruno as it gets. Complete high potential mysteries.
I don't believe you need to jump at every unknown to find high end talent. If we pick luwawu, Prince, Rabb, etc etc. it doesn't matter to me. I think we have a team in place that is very good at what it does.
If they pick Thon or Skal cool. But I'm not going to cheer for it without seeing something. At least with Luwawu and Sabonis I can see a body of work.
I shouldn't say Luwawu's ceiling is just a quality defender. I'd say his ceiling is someone like Danny Green or Josh Richardson, which is not a bad player by any means. I just feel like it's better to swing for the home run and miss than swing for a double and only make it to first.
With Thon it's the regular situation with high school prospects in that he's doing what he did against MUCH inferior competition to anyone else in this draft, and high school players always were and always will be humongous risks. Then again, some of the greatest players in league history have been drafted out of high school.
In terms of Skal, I posted in an earlier thread his stats when playing over 20 minutes per game. The most telling thing of all however was the fact that there was only a 10 game sample size! When given minutes Skal performed well. So, that tells me that Calipari really jerked him around this season. And to be honest, every game I watched for UK this season it seemed like as soon as he was getting a rhythm he found himself back on the bench. IIRC when he played over 20 minutes he averaged 13ppg, 4-5rpg, 3blk on 57% shooting. So, he leaves a lot to be desired rebounding wise but performs everywhere else that he needs to. His jump shot also leads me to believe that he'll be able to extend it to the NBA 3 with time. So what you end up getting is a shot blocking, stretch 4 which is very valuable in today's NBA.
Lastly, my fondness for Ivan Rabb is well documented. If I'm picking a solid player at the NYK/DEN I'd go with Rabb first, then Taurean Prince. But overall as of right now I'd go with Skal, Rabb, Thon and then Prince in that order.
P.S. if OG Anunoby declares those rankings change and he tops my list
DreamTeam09 wrote:Sabonis is a taller glorified Hansbrough. No athletic ability, kinda stiff. Definitely not a top 10 player.
deeps6x wrote:BoyzNTheHood wrote:S.W.A.N wrote:
I'm not so sure Luwawu is mediocre. Excellent athlete, 3 point shot and good defender and excellent frame. I think his potential goes way beyond being just a quality defender.
The thing about Thon and Skal it they haven't shown anything yet. After combine and workouts I may warm up to them but right now they are about as Bruno as it gets. Complete high potential mysteries.
I don't believe you need to jump at every unknown to find high end talent. If we pick luwawu, Prince, Rabb, etc etc. it doesn't matter to me. I think we have a team in place that is very good at what it does.
If they pick Thon or Skal cool. But I'm not going to cheer for it without seeing something. At least with Luwawu and Sabonis I can see a body of work.
I shouldn't say Luwawu's ceiling is just a quality defender. I'd say his ceiling is someone like Danny Green or Josh Richardson, which is not a bad player by any means. I just feel like it's better to swing for the home run and miss than swing for a double and only make it to first.
With Thon it's the regular situation with high school prospects in that he's doing what he did against MUCH inferior competition to anyone else in this draft, and high school players always were and always will be humongous risks. Then again, some of the greatest players in league history have been drafted out of high school.
In terms of Skal, I posted in an earlier thread his stats when playing over 20 minutes per game. The most telling thing of all however was the fact that there was only a 10 game sample size! When given minutes Skal performed well. So, that tells me that Calipari really jerked him around this season. And to be honest, every game I watched for UK this season it seemed like as soon as he was getting a rhythm he found himself back on the bench. IIRC when he played over 20 minutes he averaged 13ppg, 4-5rpg, 3blk on 57% shooting. So, he leaves a lot to be desired rebounding wise but performs everywhere else that he needs to. His jump shot also leads me to believe that he'll be able to extend it to the NBA 3 with time. So what you end up getting is a shot blocking, stretch 4 which is very valuable in today's NBA.
Lastly, my fondness for Ivan Rabb is well documented. If I'm picking a solid player at the NYK/DEN I'd go with Rabb first, then Taurean Prince. But overall as of right now I'd go with Skal, Rabb, Thon and then Prince in that order.
P.S. if OG Anunoby declares those rankings change and he tops my list
High School is NEVER a good spot to draft players. Your claim that some of the greatest players ever were drafted right out of high school is technically correct, however that was back when every team could draft HS kids. Every team was looking to beat every other team to the kids with potential first.
You say "NEVER", but then go on to agree that some of the greatest players have been selected out of high school. And the jury is still out on Thon. Who knows if teams will be jumping over one another to select him on draft night. I sure don't.
In high school you might be a kid with potential playing in a group of 200,000 other high school kids. 99% of those kids are gonna be useless garbage players who will never sniff an NBA game unless they buy a ticket to one. But if you can make it to college, suddenly you are one of 2,000 players and you are going up against peers with similar talents. Against the best 1% of the high school kids you used to dominate against. Now if you can keep dominating against these college kids, and still be in the top 2% of all of these older/better kids, well then you might just get some scouts attention and maybe even make a draft list or two - assuming you are consistent in your domination all season. If you aren't in the top 10% of this list of 400 dominant kids, you aren't getting drafted. But you can stay in college, keep improving if you are lucky, and hope to be in the top 10% of next year's 400 dominant college kids. If you still can't make the cut, try again for two more years. You might get through your 4th year before making the leap - like Buddy Hield, or you might be on the cusp every year, but never quite attracting enough attention - like Perry Ellis. You might be good enough to be drafted in year 1 or 2, but decide to stay in college, graduate with some kind of a piece of paper for your wall and keep incrementally improving your game year after year - like Denzel Valentine.
That's the life of a potentially professional athlete.
Without that extra filtering process that the college experience gives you, you might as well be buying 1000 lotto tickets and praying one of them beats the 14 million to one odds that your kid is the next star.
The draft is the lottery. Performing well in college means very little based on past experiences. It's a crap shoot. Go tell Adam Morrison, Ed O'Bannon, Thomas Robinson, etc etc etc (xInfinity) that dominating in college makes you a better pro. At the same time tell Andre Drummond. DeAndre Jordan, etc etc etc (xInfinity) that underperforming in college makes you a worse pro.
Like I said, the draft is a crapshoot and nothing is ever predetermined. No one is a sure thing and anyone who thinks they can find a sure thing is full of it.
College greatly narrows the list of potential players and greatly increases the odds that the kid you draft will succeed.
That's a pretty obvious statement. That limb is very strong. But at the same time it's not like we're talking about drafting high school scrubs or even mediocre high schoolers. Thon is a blue chip prospect and the fact that he's on the NBA radar while in high school shows that. But like I said, nothing is a sure thing. He has as much chance of being great as he does of being a bust.
deeps6x wrote:I guarantee you that (Jaylen) Brown and (Kris) Dunn are drafted OUT of the top 5.
Sakkreth wrote:JJ From Deep wrote:kron100 wrote:If we pick 10th i think we have at chance at Sabo
A chance? I don't even see him being picked in the lottery at all, he's closer to an 18-20 range selection
http://www.nbadraft.net/2016mock_draft
JJ From Deep wrote:Sakkreth wrote:JJ From Deep wrote:A chance? I don't even see him being picked in the lottery at all, he's closer to an 18-20 range selection
http://www.nbadraft.net/2016mock_draft
their draft is all over the place right now, they don't even have their order of selection correct, sabonis is not a top 10 pick, this draft is much more accurate of the state of things right now: http://www.draftexpress.com/
Syd-TK3 wrote:Is this Sabonis talk foreal or are you guys just trolling?
I'll gladly have another team take him before us and give us a chance at the top talent though
JJ From Deep wrote:**** man can the Bucks, Kings, or Pelicans just win a **** game or two!? I get excited seeing the Nuggets dropping games just to see these other teams losing just as many
kron100 wrote:Who could we offer to move up in the draft?