moocow007 wrote:This is a good article that I found about why Culver should NOT be the guy to take at 3. Found this after I had already determined Barrett is the guy to take. But it explains it pretty much with the same reasons as me.GONYK wrote:moocow007 wrote:Potentially but he can also gain some matchup advantages as a result. IMO Barrett is better suited for the NBA game. He's more explosive, he's got a much better all around offensive NBA game (he doesn't have to be an elite 3 point shooter) and I think his demeanor is better suited for being an alpha in the area of what he's best at in the NBA than Culver. Culver imo has to have the ball in his hands for longer periods of time and with his kinda shaky handles I just don't see Frontline star.
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I do think that Barrett is more explosive. I don't think Barrett is an elite athlete though. Not functionally, in the halfcourt. Open court is a different story. RJ is a killer there.
I think they were put into similar roles in their respective schools, and Culver showed much better IQ, footwork/craftiness, and defense.
RJ has better scoring instincts, more physicality, and a better raw athletic profile, but I don't see a very large gap between them as prospects.
RJ was pretty limited by his jumper and his absence of a right hand. He came by his stats on volume. Those things can improve, but they can improve for Culver as well.
I do think RJ has more of an alpha mentality than Culver, but I'm not sure that matters much if we are potentially slotting them behind 2 all stars.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/clutchpoints.com/3-reasons-drafting-jarrett-culver-at-no-3-would-be-a-mistake-for-the-knicks/amp/
As far as Barrett with KD and Kyrie...IF the Knicks are really confident that they will land the two it still really doesn't change things one bit. Barrett is still without question the better asset to have in a trade.
IF KD and Kyrie gave Perry and Mills their commitment then neither Barrett nor Culver would be a fit. From a pure fit standpoint in this scenario, DeAndre Hunter would be the best fit...if we want to draft for fit.
But if the Knicks land KD and Kyrie they should be putting all the cards on the table and looking to deal for AD. And by all indications Barrett would be the most desirable piece of any trade for Davis.
If the goal is to move down from 3 Barrett still is the better option as Barrett is the more desirable asset for the teams following the Knicks in the draft. The Lakers would immediately look to include Barrett in a trade for AD themselves (which in and if itself would be reason enough to draft Barrett at 3). Barrett would be the perfect player for the Cavs. Barrett and Trae Young would be a potentially scary and exciting duo in Atlanta.
From a style of play standpoint, it's pretty clear that Fizdale wants to play uptempo. If they don't land KD, Barrett is the better player for uptempo compared to the less athletic, slower footed Culver. If they do land KD and Kyrie they would still logically want to play uptempo considering that it'll be even more difficult to defend KD if you're pushing the ball. And Kyrie? You unleash him in an uptempo system and he can be truly scary. So again, Barrett would be a better fit as both a finisher as well as shot creator than Culver.
I just don't see any scenario where Culver makes sense over Barrett for the Knicks at 3.
Folks are getting carried away with his wingspan measurement at the combine. You still have to be able to create your shots in the NBA and I'm dubious Culver can do that (poor handles, not explosive). His showing against DeAndre Hunter in the title game imo is a foreshadowing of what he'll be able to go in the NBA against NBA defenders.
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Agreed. The things that made Culver seem attractive, back when a lot of folks were consigning themselves to getting the 5th pick, was that at that spot, Culver was big guard, with some ability to run the offense and also a good court sense. Good all around offensive game, handle needed some work, played within a great college defense.
RJ has a lot of the positive attributes of Culver and some of the negative, in a clearly more explosive and athletic player. Tall SG capable of running the paint, can make good decisions on offense? Check. Crafty scoring? Check. Now, Culver I think shows some more variety in his scoring, a little more inventiveness, but it's not like RJ can't do that. Obviously RJ has some issues being so left hand dominant. Both have jumpers that could use some work. Both have handles that could use some work.
Culver is sort of an odd choice to want over RJ as, to me - and I could be wrong here - but they are similar ENOUGH - not the same, games aren't alike - that it's weird to pick Culver.
Also agree with your trade scenarios. Just take the best guy and if that's a player other teams want a few picks down, THEN trade him, get a player back the team views as just as good AND extract a pick/player etc from them in the process.






































