I highlighted what I thought was the two best posts from this thread. I read all of them. A lot of great and solid takes but these two stood out the most.
doordoor123 wrote:I broke down Monk's game recently and man he can be a beast. He's smaller, but his quickness and separation are legit. I think he's the second best player in the draft. He thing is he's using advanced moves and moves that will translate to the NBA. When he killed North Carolina he destroyed Justin Jackson, who is 6'8 with a 6'10 wingspan. It's crazy to me that he's doing this stuff at 19. When he figures out his spots and the pace of the NBA he's going to be really **** good. I don't even think it's a question and people are going to ask why he went so low. I also think he's a better passer than he has shown. He has flashes passing, where he makes some really tough ones. His speed is going to help him with his passing in the NBA too.
toussaud wrote:kid has a lot of work to do. hes a toll booth on defense. extremely inconsistent volume shooter with no left hand to speak of. i know he is one and done but if there was ever a kid who would benefit from three years of college, hes it. his game is 100% dependent on fox right now
Threads like this are always interesting in retrospect. I still like Monk's game but it's clear, situation is king in the NBA. Both of these are true.
His advanced moves does translate as we seen with his scoring outbursts but what Mitchell had that translated was his high end 3pt variance which Monk lacked. Even when he tried the moves, it came out like Steve Francis spinning the wheel and landing on Dr. J dunks. He didn't have the natural footwork even if he has the natural skills. He instantly got off balance after the stepback 3. Something that rarely if ever happens to Mitchell. His pullup 3 was 24% as a rookie and he just finally stopped doing it as a 2nd year player realizing, he's doesn't have the footwork for it.
As a poster mentioned, Monk is a C&S and spot up killer. But you aren't running him off screens, etc.
That said, he has plenty of skill. The biggest thing I saw was what I seen at UK. He can get to any spot on the court but unlike at UK. He didn't have space in the NBA for his franchise. Fox wasn't there with the Hornets. Defense wasn't sucking in and Charlotte lacks floor spacers who can defend as well which they don't like to play with types like Monk. Defenders didn't respect shooters like Tony Parker, MKG, and other players which cut off the lane and spacing for Monk.
https://streamable.com/nbrsfhttps://streamable.com/0yjdmEach time Monk beat his man but didn't have space. Now, players with great strength or body control like Kemba or Lou Will can draw fouls in this case but Monk lacking both just throws up a bad FG attempt.
Situation matters a lot. In the case of Monk, he landed somewhere much worse than he played in college at and struggled severely. The biggest thing I always here is if I was drafted here, man, my career would be different and they are right. It might just be. A Hornet fan said this:
Hornet Mania wrote:Monk needs to play in a modern offense where the pace is quick and the ball doesn't stop. He needs the floor spaced so he can get either open threes, clear driving lanes, or one dribble into a wide-open mid-range shot, that is his game. I'm firmly convinced that if he played with a garbage squad who at least pushed the pace, like Phoenix, he'd look much better. If he played on a good team, like GS or Houston, who plays a fast style he'd contribute less but still likely look far better.
Much like Braggins mentioned with Frank/Cody/MKG, Monk's development is being wasted. I think the common denominator conservative, and more importantly totally outdated, strategy. What good team in the NBA plays a style even somewhat similar to Cliff-ball (which is just a variation of Van Gundy ball)? No one. There's good reason for that, I think. The game has changed and we're trying to force new-age pegs into old-school holes and failing all sides miserably in the process.
We can talk to our face turns blue. Love this prospect or that prospect but outside of LeBron James, MJ, and guys like that. Most of these guys need the right situation to become the best version of themselves as possible.