sully00 wrote:Kolkmania wrote:sully00 wrote:
He was never a slam dunk #1 pick. The worst thing and best thing that happened to Fultz was Giles knee injury, Giles was the slam dunk #1 pick and blew out his knee. He never should have played a game last season. I think based on play Jackson was probably the #1 pick but he created questions about his game and make up and ditched a work out. Ball is a pure PG not a guy who you can pair with another PG if that matters. Tatum has a ton of talent but a slow start it took some balls to take him over Jackson but I think talent wise it was the right decision.
I don't know how you watch college basketball and the NBA and not have reservations about Fultz and the year he had. Felt a little bit like that with Simmons but there was no other option I didn't also have concerns with. That said I was all over KO over the Greek Freak so what do I know.
Giles was a PF who didn't have great range, poor vision and didn't have the defense of a center. You could see the potential when he crossed people while being 6'10'', which seemed really crazy, but he wasn't a sure thing either. He could have been a high usage, low efficient PF, or an undersized C with poor defense.
I think a lot of the reactions about Fultz are in hindsight, we're judging a player who looks nothing similar to the player who scored efficiently from three levels while being 18 years old, was an above average playmaker and had elite measurements for a PG.
Josh Jackson wasn't quick enough to beat athletes off the dribble, his defense was overrated, one of the worst shot mechanics and 20 years old. Jayson Tatum did everything well, but nothing exceptional and he had troubles finishing around big guys and settled for long jumpers against good defenders. De'Aaron Fox was a historically bad shooter and his frame was so fragile. Dennis Smith jr. didn't gave a **** in 50% of his games and came close to Fox' efficiency from midrange on a large sample size.
I could go on and one, but at the time Markelle Fultz was the consensus #1 pick and most agreed on this forum (check the reactions after lottery). That doesn't mean he will be the best player from the draft and he'll certainly not be the best if he continues with his shooting issues.
There were no concerns with Giles athleticism and defense prior to the knees it was whether or not he could fill out and develop a jumper but he was a freak athlete before the knees, and looked like an NBA ready rebounder and shot blocker. I can only speak for myself but I had issues with Fultz all year. He is the best offensive player in the world with his team down 10 points and the game about to get out of hand. I though he looked pretty pedestrian in conference play until he came up lame and just stopped playing all together. At that point in the year is when NBA people start really paying attention and Jackson and Tatum were great. Ball was good all year long he just got exposed a couple of times specifically against Fox that was going to make you worry.
He was a quick jumper, but not someone with a crazy vertical. He had very quick feet prior to his knee injuries (dissipated completely afterwards). His on ball defense was good if he was locked in, but his timing on help defense wasn't impressive, the feeling on the defensive end wasn't extraordinary and at 6'9'/10' and small frame he wasn't projected as a center.
With the ball in his hands he did a lot of fancy stuff, but he was a bit like Ayton in high school that the mix tapes were awesome, but as soon as you watched full games you'd question his IQ.
You're absolutely right that Fultz' efficiency took a hit in conference play, but the lack of help on the offensive end was a legit explanation. It's not like he was a black hole, on the contrary, he tended to overpass early in the game imo.
"At that point in the year is when NBA people start really paying attention and Jackson and Tatum were great", this is just laughable. NBA teams start scouting these kids seriously when they're 14 year old kids and rightfully so, every bit of additional context and data can be usefull in a major decision for the franchise.
Fox had a couple of great games against UCLA, but their defensive scheme in P&R defense was the main reason why Fox scored that many points.