bwgood77 wrote:Oh sure. There's a reason Booker was 4th. We couldn't have taken any of those guys in last year's draft anyways. Sure we could have taken Jokic the previous year instead of Ennis or Bogdan, but McD loves his guards. Not sure he was on too many radars either.
But even if we just end up with the 4th best player out of last year's draft, that's pretty good at 13.
... kind of like when the Suns drafted Michael Finley with the twenty-first pick in 1995, and Finley turned out to be no worse than the third-best player in that draft, behind Kevin Garnett and Rasheed Wallace (and even Wallace is somewhat debatable).
http://www.basketball-reference.com/draft/NBA_1995.htmlThat is a more extreme case (the twenty-first pick producing the third-best player, especially since that draft proved fairly talented), but you also see the value of Finley having spent four years in college: he was ready to contribute on a major level right away—on a playoff team. As a rookie for Phoenix, he averaged 15.0 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 3.5 assists, posting a 2.17:1.00 assists-to-turnover ratio, a .511 two-point field goal percentage, and a .551 True Shooting Percentage while serving as the Suns' most versatile perimeter defender.
Then you have 1996, when the Suns drafted Steve Nash fifteenth and he arguably proved to be the second or third-best player in that draft behind Kobe Bryant (some people might say Allen Iverson as well).
http://www.basketball-reference.com/draft/NBA_1996.htmlI did not really understand the Ennis pick as soon as I saw him play in the Summer League in July 2014. If you are that undersized, you really need to compensate with speed, and he lacked that element. If the Suns wanted to ensure themselves of a third point guard, why not just re-sign Ish Smith, who I feel that Phoenix undervalued (even at the time, I saw no reason not to bring him back)? Then again, forty players went before Nikola Jokic.
On the other hand, Rodney Hood, who went five picks after Ennis, would have been much better.