Post#756 » by darealjuice » Mon May 21, 2018 8:12 pm
It seems like the Doncic vs Ayton debate is based a lot on proven vs potential.
Doncic has had about as impressive of a year as you can have in Europe as far as accolades go: Eurobasket Champion, Euroleague MVP, 2nd straight Rising Star, Final Four MVP, and Euroleague Champion. 6'8" playmakers that are already adept out of the pick and roll don't grow on trees. His outside shooting leaves a bit to be desired even in the context of his shot selection, but his form and free throw shooting lead me to believe that his percentages should improve with less shot creation responsibility. He's not an amazing athlete, but he moves really well for a 19 year old that's 6'8" 230 and is very strong. My only concerns with him are how much his average explosiveness limits his upside on offense, how much his shooting improves in the NBA, and how he's going to do defending 1 on 1. Teams would have a tough time matching up defensively against a perimeter trio of Doncic, Booker, and JJ with a shooter at the 4 and an athletic screen/roll big at 5. I'd be comfortable letting JJ match up with the guards Doncic can't handle on defense, although I'm not sure how well Doncic will be able to guard NBA wings.
Ayton is one of 5 freshman to ever average 20+/10+ and has the best TS%, TRB%, AST%, TOV%, and BLK% of all 5, yet for some reason it felt like he should've done more. He has ideal center size and length, insane mobility and agility, elite athleticism, and the same build as many great past centers. His footwork is very good, his shot looks solid with translatable percentages, and he can do everything from bury you in the post and dunk on you to pick-and-pop and nail a 3. He settled for jump shots too much, but it's tough to blame him with how few post touches he got. The problem is that his defense left a lot to be desired: average at best shot blocking, poor weak-side rotations, near complete lack of boxing out, lack of physicality when defending the post. You can blame Miller for having a center play power forward all season and not adjusting his system so he isn't hard hedging and recovering on ball screens with no positive defenders on the team, but at times Ayton showed a troubling lack of awareness on off-ball defense that will need to improve to reach his ceiling. I don't think the league has left behind Ayton though. He showed all year that he has the ability to defend on the perimeter, and he'll be a nightmare for defenses to matchup with if small ball can't keep him off the court.
I personally very slightly lean Luka, but the rarity of a franchise center is definitely appealing. To me, Ayton is a bet on coaching. His subtle flaws like poor boxing out and screen setting are things that shouldn't be difficult to fix. The key to his ceiling will be unlocking his shot blocking and defensive potential, which is going to require a lot of experience and tape watching. If his defense never comes around, then his ceiling is something like a jumbo Amar'e with more size, more perimeter mobility, less explosion, less offensive intensity, and hope of a 3 point shot.