fansinceforever wrote:kevin Huerter sounds intriguing. I really miss the DX strengths and weaknesses videos.
https://thefrontofficeeye.com/2018/05/22/kevin-huerter-scouting-report/
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fansinceforever wrote:kevin Huerter sounds intriguing. I really miss the DX strengths and weaknesses videos.
leroyjw10 wrote:I'm really surprised how many on this board are advocating for non-shooters. If there's one thing this team needs, it's shooting.
leroyjw10 wrote:I'm really surprised how many on this board are advocating for non-shooters. If there's one thing this team needs, it's shooting. And once they have that, they need to get more of it. For me, if there's a prospect at the 1-4 who shot less than 35% from the college 3, then they are a non-option at 17.
That eliminates Troy Brown, Kevin Knox, De'Anthony Melton, Jarred Vanderbilt and Zhaire Smith (I know he shot 45%, but he did it on 1 attempt per game with one of the ugliest forms I've seen). Success in the NBA relies too much on the 3-pointer to be drafting non-shooters.
jschligs wrote:Am I the only one who doesn't know who the **** SupremeHustle is?
leroyjw10 wrote:I'm really surprised how many on this board are advocating for non-shooters. If there's one thing this team needs, it's shooting. And once they have that, they need to get more of it. For me, if there's a prospect at the 1-4 who shot less than 35% from the college 3, then they are a non-option at 17.
That eliminates Troy Brown, Kevin Knox, De'Anthony Melton, Jarred Vanderbilt and Zhaire Smith (I know he shot 45%, but he did it on 1 attempt per game with one of the ugliest forms I've seen). Success in the NBA relies too much on the 3-pointer to be drafting non-shooters.
Bernman wrote:Rockmaninoff wrote:emunney wrote:
Saw something the other day that Young took 1/3 of his 3s from 30 feet.
I kind of see Young as a new age AI without the cultural significance. His shot chart is nuts.
I'd be really surprised if Weltman and Hammond pass on him.
Would AI be viewed as effective in this era? I had a hard enough time acknowledging it in the previous one.
He doesn't really seem like Hambone's type. He drafted Jennings. But he wasn't short (limbed) and unathletic.
MilBucksBackOnTop06 wrote:The fight for civil rights just like for liberty and justice and peace won't be won by man. It will take a god...so lets move on to sports.
Magic Giannison wrote:Giannis is god but even god's cannot save our **** team.
emunney wrote:If AI played like Nash and vice versa, would they both have been twice as good?
MilBucksBackOnTop06 wrote:The fight for civil rights just like for liberty and justice and peace won't be won by man. It will take a god...so lets move on to sports.
Magic Giannison wrote:Giannis is god but even god's cannot save our **** team.
leroyjw10 wrote:I'm really surprised how many on this board are advocating for non-shooters. If there's one thing this team needs, it's shooting. And once they have that, they need to get more of it. For me, if there's a prospect at the 1-4 who shot less than 35% from the college 3, then they are a non-option at 17.
That eliminates Troy Brown, Kevin Knox, De'Anthony Melton, Jarred Vanderbilt and Zhaire Smith (I know he shot 45%, but he did it on 1 attempt per game with one of the ugliest forms I've seen). Success in the NBA relies too much on the 3-pointer to be drafting non-shooters.
Badgerlander wrote:leroyjw10 wrote:I'm really surprised how many on this board are advocating for non-shooters. If there's one thing this team needs, it's shooting. And once they have that, they need to get more of it. For me, if there's a prospect at the 1-4 who shot less than 35% from the college 3, then they are a non-option at 17.
That eliminates Troy Brown, Kevin Knox, De'Anthony Melton, Jarred Vanderbilt and Zhaire Smith (I know he shot 45%, but he did it on 1 attempt per game with one of the ugliest forms I've seen). Success in the NBA relies too much on the 3-pointer to be drafting non-shooters.
Jaylen Brown shot 30/102 29.4% from 3pt in his only year at Cali, shot 121/306 39.5 % this year his second in the nba
Jason Tatum shot 40/117 34.2% at Duke, 105/242 43.4% this year
OG Anunoby 14/45 31.1% at Indy (injured), 73/197 37.1% Raptors
Kuzma 27/84 32.1%, 159/434 36.6% Lakerz
Dennis Smith 55/153 35.9%, 106/339 31.3% Dallas
Donovan Mitchell 80/226 35.4%, 187/550 34.0% Utah
Lonzo Ball 80/194 41.2%, 90/295 30.5% (ok EVERYONE saw that coming but still lol)
Ntilikina 22/51 43.1%, 50/157 31.8% Knicks
Monk 104/262 39.7%, 83/243 34.2% Hornets
Justin Jackson 105/284 37%, 57/185 30.8% Kings
Terrance Fergusion only shot 21/67 31.3% but was touted as a 3+D prospect and well liked on the board, 40/120 33.3% OKC
Ojeleye 73/172 42.4%, 40/125 32.0% Celtics
Sterling Brown 61/136 44.9%, 32/91 35.2%
So Markkanen, Kennard, and Josh Hart shot to expectations in last years draft
jschligs wrote:Am I the only one who doesn't know who the **** SupremeHustle is?
Rockmaninoff wrote:My mind thinks of Young as ball dominant, small, inefficient, but also tough, tenacious, and really pretty skilled. That's kind of how I thought of AI. Any team with either as their best player probably has limited potential, but I think Young with Giannis would be pretty wild.
Orlando really has no star offensive players, and they have a ton of defensive/finisher types that could compliment Young. While Young may not fit Hammond's mold, I think as an organization they need someone that will generate buzz, and would likely weight that heavily.
Badgerlander wrote:fansinceforever wrote:kevin Huerter sounds intriguing. I really miss the DX strengths and weaknesses videos.
https://thefrontofficeeye.com/2018/05/22/kevin-huerter-scouting-report/
MilBucksBackOnTop06 wrote:The fight for civil rights just like for liberty and justice and peace won't be won by man. It will take a god...so lets move on to sports.
Magic Giannison wrote:Giannis is god but even god's cannot save our **** team.
Badgerlander wrote:leroyjw10 wrote:I'm really surprised how many on this board are advocating for non-shooters. If there's one thing this team needs, it's shooting. And once they have that, they need to get more of it. For me, if there's a prospect at the 1-4 who shot less than 35% from the college 3, then they are a non-option at 17.
That eliminates Troy Brown, Kevin Knox, De'Anthony Melton, Jarred Vanderbilt and Zhaire Smith (I know he shot 45%, but he did it on 1 attempt per game with one of the ugliest forms I've seen). Success in the NBA relies too much on the 3-pointer to be drafting non-shooters.
Jaylen Brown shot 30/102 29.4% from 3pt in his only year at Cali, shot 121/306 39.5 % this year his second in the nba
Jason Tatum shot 40/117 34.2% at Duke, 105/242 43.4% this year
OG Anunoby 14/45 31.1% at Indy (injured), 73/197 37.1% Raptors
Kuzma 27/84 32.1%, 159/434 36.6% Lakerz
Dennis Smith 55/153 35.9%, 106/339 31.3% Dallas
Donovan Mitchell 80/226 35.4%, 187/550 34.0% Utah
Lonzo Ball 80/194 41.2%, 90/295 30.5% (ok EVERYONE saw that coming but still lol)
Ntilikina 22/51 43.1%, 50/157 31.8% Knicks
Monk 104/262 39.7%, 83/243 34.2% Hornets
Justin Jackson 105/284 37%, 57/185 30.8% Kings
Terrance Fergusion only shot 21/67 31.3% but was touted as a 3+D prospect and well liked on the board, 40/120 33.3% OKC
Ojeleye 73/172 42.4%, 40/125 32.0% Celtics
Sterling Brown 61/136 44.9%, 32/91 35.2%
So Markkanen, Kennard, and Josh Hart shot to expectations in last years draft
Badgerlander wrote:
leroyjw10 wrote:No doubt there are exceptions to every rule, but I'd bet there are a lot more players who enter the NBA as poor shooters and remain (or leave) poor/below average shooters. Just recently, Josh Jackson, DeAaron Fox, Jonathan Isaac, Justin Jackson, Ben Simmons, Kris Dunn, DeAndre Bembry, Emmanuel Mudiay, Justice Winslow, Jerian Grant, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson and Justin Anderson all had questions around their shooting that remain to this day.
My point is that I'd much rather spend a pick on a guy who has proven he can shoot at a high level. Too risky otherwise. There are a lot of guys (Frazier, Okobo, Evans, Huerter, Hutchinson, Diop, Holiday, Thomas) likely available at 17 who have shot at at least an average rate that I'd rather draft. Shooting should be a top priority.
Badgerlander wrote:leroyjw10 wrote:I'm really surprised how many on this board are advocating for non-shooters. If there's one thing this team needs, it's shooting. And once they have that, they need to get more of it. For me, if there's a prospect at the 1-4 who shot less than 35% from the college 3, then they are a non-option at 17.
That eliminates Troy Brown, Kevin Knox, De'Anthony Melton, Jarred Vanderbilt and Zhaire Smith (I know he shot 45%, but he did it on 1 attempt per game with one of the ugliest forms I've seen). Success in the NBA relies too much on the 3-pointer to be drafting non-shooters.
Jaylen Brown shot 30/102 29.4% from 3pt in his only year at Cali, shot 121/306 39.5 % this year his second in the nba
Jason Tatum shot 40/117 34.2% at Duke, 105/242 43.4% this year
OG Anunoby 14/45 31.1% at Indy (injured), 73/197 37.1% Raptors
Kuzma 27/84 32.1%, 159/434 36.6% Lakerz
Dennis Smith 55/153 35.9%, 106/339 31.3% Dallas
Donovan Mitchell 80/226 35.4%, 187/550 34.0% Utah
Lonzo Ball 80/194 41.2%, 90/295 30.5% (ok EVERYONE saw that coming but still lol)
Ntilikina 22/51 43.1%, 50/157 31.8% Knicks
Monk 104/262 39.7%, 83/243 34.2% Hornets
Justin Jackson 105/284 37%, 57/185 30.8% Kings
Terrance Fergusion only shot 21/67 31.3% but was touted as a 3+D prospect and well liked on the board, 40/120 33.3% OKC
Ojeleye 73/172 42.4%, 40/125 32.0% Celtics
Sterling Brown 61/136 44.9%, 32/91 35.2%
So Markkanen, Kennard, and Josh Hart shot to expectations in last years draft
Bernman wrote:leroyjw10 wrote:No doubt there are exceptions to every rule, but I'd bet there are a lot more players who enter the NBA as poor shooters and remain (or leave) poor/below average shooters. Just recently, Josh Jackson, DeAaron Fox, Jonathan Isaac, Justin Jackson, Ben Simmons, Kris Dunn, DeAndre Bembry, Emmanuel Mudiay, Justice Winslow, Jerian Grant, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson and Justin Anderson all had questions around their shooting that remain to this day.
My point is that I'd much rather spend a pick on a guy who has proven he can shoot at a high level. Too risky otherwise. There are a lot of guys (Frazier, Okobo, Evans, Huerter, Hutchinson, Diop, Holiday, Thomas) likely available at 17 who have shot at at least an average rate that I'd rather draft. Shooting should be a top priority.
There are too many counter-examples to where you can't really call them exceptions. It's a mixed bag. Shooting is something most players can develop with form, repetition, and not changing their muscle memory too severely. You have to project based on those factors. Otherwise you'll miss out on some of the best players in the NBA, like LeBron.
First year LeBron came out shooting 29% from 3. But he was very young, had good form, and work ethic. So I'm not going to dismiss Troy Brown just on that basis when he's shooting similarly, is very young, has good form, and work ethic. I agree that it's a bit of a risk. But IMO there's a far greater chance he grows into an impact player than a Huerter you almost solely are drafting for the shooting. He'd need to be an elite shooter, and then there's still what, 80 players in the NBA better than Korver or a lesser 3+d like Bowen. You can land these guys in the 2nd round. Like Brown last year, or Alkins this one.