Roy The Natural wrote:The-Power wrote:The-Power wrote:
Sounds a lot like last years Aminu to me. Nice player, not worth a high lottery pick though.
Well, it's not. Even in a rather pessimistic scenario he's bound to be a more impactful defender (inside, outside, rebounder) and a better shooter. And this isn't even factoring in most the sleeping potential he has in him.
Well just saying stuff doesn't make it true. He's obviously bound to be a better shooter through the years than Aminu, the rest is pretty close. Nothing necessarily suggest to me he'll be a significantly better rebounder than Aminu... And defensively... Well, I guess we'll have to see on that. I thought that Gerald Wallace was going to be MKGs floor... I'm not making that mistake with Isaac. He doesn't have a smidgen of the strength that Ibaka has... I see a better Aminu as his reasonable outcome. A slightly better version of what Aminu was last year seems pretty fair to me.
Obviously nothing is true merely because I say something. But the same is true for you comparing him to Aminu due to alleged similarities and based on that calling him not worth a high lottery pick, no?
Obviously we're evaluating these talent based on their performances at the college level and flashes they show there. We make comparisons to other players and project their developments. So naturally nobody can claim something with any kind of certainty when it comes to a players impact down the road. But obviously everybody is entitled to express his/her thoughts on any given player - at least as long it's plausible and somewhat substantiated.
To me Isaac has shown an inside and outside game defensively that makes him an extremely intriguing defensive prospect in the modern NBA. Given his young age, the fact that only recently the transformation as an interior defender took place and his already impressive defensive possessions coupled with his actual desire to play defense and learn I'd be genuinely disappointed if he wasn't one of the top 5-6 defensive forwards in the league in a few years. But I'll gladly admit that this is still very much possible given the lack of knowledge we naturally have for players this early in their careers.
However, if development is fathomable and to be expected I tend to go with a more optimistic approach. Otherwise there wouldn't be a single player I'd be really excited about this year - and I love a lot of prospect in this year's draft class - because they all have flaws that will hurt them at the next level if they don't fix them to a certain extent. But history has shown that a lot of young prospects improve considerably in their first year's in the NBA to nobody's surprise.
As I hinted above, a pessimistic outlook would be a versatile defender who should be at least in the conversation of All-NBA defensive teams - if given sufficient minutes - while being an efficient offensive player who can stretch the floor. Is that worth a top 5 pick in hindsight? Probably not - which by the way would be true for basically every player in this draft if we apply a pessimistic scenario. But it most certainly is worth a lottery pick. And in case we use an optimistic scenario for his development I can't see more than four players being clearly better than him down the road.