Bob8 wrote:stevegb wrote:JPF wrote:I am glad things worked like that for Kurucs.
Kurucs was considered as one of the most talented european players in junior competitions and was than predicted to do well in NBA as well. However at the transition from the junior competitions to senior Barcelona's team, he kind of got lost, didn't get many minutes and the hype around him was dissapearing.
I haven't watched him play a while and wasn't able to make a judgement on his potential on the draft day, but am glad that one of the most exciting european players from youth comeptitions found his place in NBA, while being pretty much neglected in Barcelona.
From what I've read Barcelona started hiding him once he made it known he wanted to move to the NBA, if I remember it correctly their quote was something along the lines of "we wont be a farm team for the NBA anymore"
totally untrue. the problem for young players in the best clubs in Europe is, they're competing against the best players in Europe. they play only if they are better than them. nobody cares about their potential, they have to be better than players in their prime at this moment. Kurucs was simply not good enough. that's why nobody under 22 plays in Euroleague. Luka was just an exception.
Actually there is plenty of truth to what he said. Your statement is based upon your opinion.
https://www.netsdaily.com/2018/8/23/17771248/the-mystery-that-is-rodions-kurucsact, at one point in 2016-17, Draft Express had him as a late lottery pick, but injuries and a lack of playing time with F.C. Barcelona dropped his draft stock as the season wore on. While he was healthy this past season, the dispute with Barca got worse and his playing time dropped.
Moreover, until late this season, Barca wouldn’t budge on his buyout, which was reportedly $5 million. Considering that NBA teams can’t pay more than $700,000 of an international player’s buyout, it made no sense for Kurucs or any NBA to draft him. All that hurt his draft stock more than any injuries. (And even after the Draft, buyout talks between the Nets and Barcelona took so long that Kurucs couldn’t play in the Summer League.)
As Mike Schmitz of ESPN wrote back in April, Kurucs’s fate in Barcelona was sealed after “his camp opted against signing a long-term extension in the offseason,” talking about last summer. Things went to extremes this past season.
“Barcelona, known for its in-house politics, has worked hard to keep Kurucs from being seen by NBA scouts, with a handful of European-based talent evaluators failing to catch him playing in meaningful games,” wrote Schmitz. “Scouts also aren’t allowed into Barcelona practices. One NBA team in particular has assigned an international scout to follow Kurucs around to every game, hoping to catch a glimpse of the 20-year-old forward.”