He said triple double though... Excuse him he is half Greek

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emunney wrote:Badgerlander wrote:snoogans8056 wrote:I think he's a no-brainer at 17 if you want a big that can even be used against the teams we saw last night. Spaces the floor, mobile enough to cover screens, and protects the rim. Guys like him and Thon are what the future of the 5 looks like.
Then the future better learn to communicate, rotate, pass and rebound because the gold standard is still Tim Duncan until Tim Duncan with a crossover and 3pt jumper surfaces. I'm going with Bradley higher on my board until then.
I really like Bradley a lot. So damn solid. I have to believe there's still a place in the NBA for good big men who can't switch everything or block 3 shots a game, but who will contest vertically, rebound on both ends and generally use that big body extraordinarily well. You watch a UNC game and he's getting good position early in every play on both ends. My only hesitation on him is that maybe that place in the NBA for him is pretty small; but the counter-point is 37 year old Tim Duncan anchoring the Spurs to a 4-1 Finals win over a very modern Miami team.
My gut says the 'demise' of his type of player is an exaggerated reaction to how overall good the Ws are. Yet if you watch how the Ws defend, yeah, Draymond being able to cover almost any type of player is an advantage, but in most actions, it's much more about communication and execution and they integrate a lot of interesting zone concepts in the middle of the floor. Their defense with Zaza is just fine even without Draymond on the floor. I think Bradley's going to be able to do that stuff, and he's a hell of a lot better rebounder and harder to get vertical on in general than Zaza is.
trwi7 wrote:**** me deep, Giannis. ****. Me. Deep.
Gery Woelfel wrote:Got a time big boy?
Ron Swanson wrote:You easily take Bradley if he falls to the 2nd round, but for those trying to talk themselves into him at #17, what makes him a better prospect than Jarett Allen or Anigbogu? I don't see it.
Ron Swanson wrote:You easily take Bradley if he falls to the 2nd round, but for those trying to talk themselves into him at #17, what makes him a better prospect than Jarett Allen or Anigbogu? I don't see it.
trwi7 wrote:**** me deep, Giannis. ****. Me. Deep.
Gianstoppable wrote:What realistically could the Pistons want for #12?
yoshii8 wrote:Gianstoppable wrote:What realistically could the Pistons want for #12?
From us, I'm guessing Middleton.
Bernman wrote:yoshii8 wrote:Gianstoppable wrote:What realistically could the Pistons want for #12?
From us, I'm guessing Middleton.
Tell them to build a time machine. Then they could have him for free.
As is, it's going to cost them considerably more than the 12th pick.
Gianstoppable wrote:Bernman wrote:yoshii8 wrote:
From us, I'm guessing Middleton.
Tell them to build a time machine. Then they could have him for free.
As is, it's going to cost them considerably more than the 12th pick.
I'd offer them Delly and #17 for #12, take it or leave it. They want a player who can help now. He wont help much but he could do some good there and they only drop 5 spots.
TaterTots wrote:kaba is also 21 while Ike is the youngest player in the draft
Bernman wrote:Why is Anigbogu a better prospect than, say, a guy like Kaba? They have similar measurements. Kaba is now in the 240's to 250's weight-wise. Kaba has the jumper teams now crave from a big. He's a better handler. He's more aware. He's more graceful. He's a better rebounder. Anigbogu has a better block rate, but also a significantly higher foul rate. So it's a trade off. Kaba has a vastly superior steal rate. Kaba's #'s, when he stepped up in comp, are extremely intriguing. Efficiency dropped somewhat, but volume went up, rebounds were all the way up to 10 in 26 minutes, he averaged 1.6 steals and 1.2 blocks. His steal-rate is consistently really high overall for a big, making his deflection-rate good overall.
Kaba's name has been around for a little while though. So it loses luster. Anigbogu is in the honeymoon period. That would be a reach of a pick. He's more theoretical potential guy, not realistic, let alone mostly developed one. He was a limited bench player at UCLA. Behind fellow frosh T.J. Leaf, who would be the superior pick at 17, and then we may get the better version of Anigbobu w/ our 2nd. Although I suspect some GM's see similar things I do with Kaba.
Ron Swanson wrote:Is Kaba even gonna get drafted? He isn't anywhere near the athlete that Ike is, and he hasn't shown a whole lot of improvement in the last 2-3 years.
M-C-G wrote:Ike had a meniscus issue I believe coming into the season, so I wouldn't get to wrapped up in production and playing time personally. I'll let some of our euro friends chime in on Kaba, but Ike is a really physical dude in the mold of Tristian Thompson. As I recall the euro friends felt like Kaba was big but not the dirty work guy. I think Kaba is intriguing but I like Ike a lot more.
Here is a good article on TT and his role. If you like that, I think Ike is the guy you want, plus the vids of his workouts, his shot was way better than I anticipated.
http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2016/2/17/11022038/tristan-thompson-cavaliers-importance-role-player