NTB wrote:
Does that look like 5% body fat to anyone?
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4. Memphis Grizzlies: Deandre Ayton.
Kevin O’Connor:
"Nothing has changed regarding Ayton.
He comes to the NBA with an imposing physique, and vertical and lateral athleticism that allows him to finish off lobs, dunks, and drives with ease. Ayton will flourish in the high pick-and-roll with NBA spacing and he’s a solid shooter with underrated passing vision.
There are downsides: He can be absent-minded on both ends of the court and can fade away on offense as he aimlessly roams the perimeter or misread coverages on defense.
But Ayton checks a lot of boxes necessary to be a high-level big man for a long time in the league. He’s shown enough flashes on defense, and he’s an elite rebounder, so he won’t be a total liability like some have made him out to be".
Jonathan Tjarks:
"I’m just not sure that Ayton is a difference-maker in comparison with his peers in the NBA in the same way he was in college.
There are a lot of big men at the next level who can be excellent roll men if they are playing in sufficient space. Ayton can put up big counting numbers in the right system, for sure, but I think all the top big men in this draft can.
He’s a decent shooter, but he doesn’t have much fluidity when it comes to putting the ball on the floor and making plays in space. I’m not sure he’s ever going to be an elite face-up guy at the 3-point line.
I don’t think Ayton is as good a shooter as Jackson, as skilled as Wendell Carter Jr., or as potentially dominant defensively as Mo Bamba. The edge he has on those guys is his ability to establish position in the paint and play with his back to the basket."
Djedefre wrote:Tjarks is 101% right. It’s sad (very sad actually) but so very true. He will never catch Amare, let alone other NBA greats he’s been compared to.
I think we weren't going to pick Smith with our pick without the trade, Philly wanted Smith so thats why the trade happened. Our pick was DiVincenzo and so if we wanted to look back and discuss the trade we should compare those two careers.bhawk wrote:On the other side of the coin, I am concerned about the Zhaire Smith + Miami pick for Mikal Bridges deal. We bet REALLY big that Bridges will be better than Smith. I am not so sure...
Stark wrote:I think we weren't going to pick Smith with our pick without the trade, Philly wanted Smith so thats why the trade happened. Our pick was DiVincenzo and so if we wanted to look back and discuss the trade we should compare those two careers.bhawk wrote:On the other side of the coin, I am concerned about the Zhaire Smith + Miami pick for Mikal Bridges deal. We bet REALLY big that Bridges will be better than Smith. I am not so sure...
However whatever happens in the future. Trading for Mikal was a good choice when you think about our current and future plans. If he becomes a bust and doesn't perform well in the future it sucks but I believe it wasn't a dumb decision when you compare Mikal and other realistic prospects.
I'm more worried about the Mia pick. If that pick becomes something valuable in the future and Mikal doesn't become the player we wanted him to be. That will look pretty bad.
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Djedefre wrote:Tjarks is 101% right. It’s sad (very sad actually) but so very true. He will never catch Amare, let alone other NBA greats he’s been compared to.
Saberestar wrote:4. Memphis Grizzlies: Deandre Ayton.
Kevin O’Connor:
"Nothing has changed regarding Ayton.
He comes to the NBA with an imposing physique, and vertical and lateral athleticism that allows him to finish off lobs, dunks, and drives with ease. Ayton will flourish in the high pick-and-roll with NBA spacing and he’s a solid shooter with underrated passing vision.
There are downsides: He can be absent-minded on both ends of the court and can fade away on offense as he aimlessly roams the perimeter or misread coverages on defense.
But Ayton checks a lot of boxes necessary to be a high-level big man for a long time in the league. He’s shown enough flashes on defense, and he’s an elite rebounder, so he won’t be a total liability like some have made him out to be".Jonathan Tjarks:
"I’m just not sure that Ayton is a difference-maker in comparison with his peers in the NBA in the same way he was in college.
There are a lot of big men at the next level who can be excellent roll men if they are playing in sufficient space. Ayton can put up big counting numbers in the right system, for sure, but I think all the top big men in this draft can.
He’s a decent shooter, but he doesn’t have much fluidity when it comes to putting the ball on the floor and making plays in space. I’m not sure he’s ever going to be an elite face-up guy at the 3-point line.
I don’t think Ayton is as good a shooter as Jackson, as skilled as Wendell Carter Jr., or as potentially dominant defensively as Mo Bamba. The edge he has on those guys is his ability to establish position in the paint and play with his back to the basket."
Djedefre wrote:Tjarks is 101% right. It’s sad (very sad actually) but so very true. He will never catch Amare, let alone other NBA greats he’s been compared to.

There are a lot of big men at the next level who can be excellent roll men if they are playing in sufficient space. Ayton can put up big counting numbers in the right system, for sure, but I think all the top big men in this draft can.
He’s a decent shooter, but he doesn’t have much fluidity when it comes to putting the ball on the floor and making plays in space. I’m not sure he’s ever going to be an elite face-up guy at the 3-point line.
There are downsides: He can be absent-minded on both ends of the court and can fade away on offense as he aimlessly roams the perimeter or misread coverages on defense.

Mjeezy2006 wrote:Djedefre wrote:Tjarks is 101% right. It’s sad (very sad actually) but so very true. He will never catch Amare, let alone other NBA greats he’s been compared to.
WTF are you talking about ...... he hasn't even played in an NBA game yet......EVERY GM in the NBA would have taken Ayton #1.
Common suns fans... show a little optimism, jesus christ


