Williams is one of only two returnees that are projected to go in the top 10 with Michigan State sophomore forward Miles Bridges being the other one at No. 6 overall.
February 2017:
1. Boston Celtics (via Nets): Markelle Fultz (Washington, PG, Freshman)
2. Phoenix Suns: Lonzo Ball (UCLA, PG, Freshman)
3. Los Angeles Lakers: Josh Jackson (Kansas, SG/SF, Freshman)
4. Orlando Magic: Jayson Tatum (Duke, SF, Freshman)
5. Philadelphia 76ers: Malik Monk (Kentucky, SG, Freshman)
6. Minnesota Timberwolves: Jonathan Isaac (Florida State, SF/PF, Freshman)
7. Dallas Mavericks: Dennis Smith Jr. (North Carolina State, PG, Freshman)
8. New York Knicks: Frank Ntilikina (France, PG/SG, 1998)
9. Sacramento Kings (via Pelicans): De'Aaron Fox (Kentucky, PG, Freshman)
10. Portland Trail Blazers: Lauri Markkanen (Arizona, PF/C, Freshman)
11. Chicago Bulls (via Kings): Robert Williams (Texas A&M, PF, Freshman)
December 2017:
"A young Antonio McDyess, if you will, is what I like to compare him to," Smith said.
September 2017:
An Entirely Premature 2018 NBA Lottery Mock Draft
8. Philadelphia 76ers (via Lakers): Robert Williams
Forward, Texas A&M, sophomore (6-foot-9, 237 pounds, 19 years old)
Have seen McDyess play, and for rebounding and blocks and size that is a good comparison.
As you can see, for a year or two everyone has been saying Williams was someone to go around pick 10 or 12, in this draft or the previous one.
A pick that had to be made.
His slide started at pick 13.
He started sliding more quickly at pick 15.
A lot was position? Nearly everyone was a small forward or shooting guard, plus a point guard. Nobody wanted height, shot blocking.
Lakers need outside shooting, to spread the floor for LeBron and LeGeorge. Wagner fits.
Celtics need paint help, dunks, blocks, and more blocks. On a team that has so many who want shoot, including a bunch who shouldn't, if Williams just dunks and defends for 5 or 10 minutes and is a good teammate on the bench then it was a swell pick.


















