Image ImageImage Image

2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery

Moderators: HomoSapien, AshyLarrysDiaper, coldfish, Payt10, Ice Man, dougthonus, Michael Jackson, Tommy Udo 6 , kulaz3000, fleet, DASMACKDOWN, GimmeDat, RedBulls23

User avatar
coldfish
Forum Mod - Bulls
Forum Mod - Bulls
Posts: 60,769
And1: 38,141
Joined: Jun 11, 2004
Location: Right in the middle
   

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1661 » by coldfish » Tue Jun 4, 2019 10:56 am

Axolotl wrote:For the life of me, I just can't wrap my head around Cam Reddish. When he does basketball things, he looks like someone decided to build a great basketball player, and came up with Cam. But when he plays basketball, it looks like whoever built Cam didn't know what a basketball player is supposed to actually do. Like a carpenter, who builds a violin with only a picture of a violin to guide him. The end result is gorgeous but unplayable.


Best description ever.
cjbulls
Analyst
Posts: 3,584
And1: 1,301
Joined: Jun 26, 2018

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1662 » by cjbulls » Tue Jun 4, 2019 11:13 am

KevinPandawong wrote:
cjbulls wrote:
KevinPandawong wrote:
I don't presume to know, I'm not in his camp. My guess would be, his agent felt confident in their ability to land workouts with teams in the 2nd half of the lotto. Why is the suspicion solely on NAW when mostly none of his peers participated either?

I cited two above-average athletes that have nothing to hide that are nowhere near top-8 projections, outliers to the 2 groups you defined that skipped measurements. Of the 58 combine participants, I'd be surprised if 1/5 of them end up drafted in the 1st round.


I'll help you. It's because he wasn't going to test well. It's weird for you to argue the point vehemently when you say you don't presume to know why he wouldn't test.


It seems you don't understand what point I'm contending then. You asserted that NAW didn't participate because he's afraid of the results; I counter-claimed that he isn't hiding, that it's not a red-flag choosing to skip those measurements much like his other peers projected in the top half of the 1st round. Literally go ask anyone if they find it concerning that NAW wasn't measured, I'm pretty sure most would agree its status-quo for prospects in his range.

I don't presume to know his camps' reasons, because I am not the one that advised him to skip those measurements. How are you so certain that he skipped because he wasn't going to test well? Were you in the room when that was decided? Do you have a report of someone close to NAW or his agency stating that? More than likely, that's a presumption you made of your own and without any grounding other than your 'eye-test'. I offered a guess, one I find most probable, but I'm not going to spout off my opinion as fact. So thanks but no thanks on the "help".


Oh, so now you’re hiding behind “we don’t know him personally so we don’t know”. But we know he isn’t athletic, we know he did the physical measurements but skipped the athletic testing. We know historically, and in this draft, players with weaker athletic testing numbers mysteriously seem to keep missing the athletic testing. Don’t waste my time if that is the standard you want to hide behind.

Like I said, he probably caught a cold that day and couldn’t perform a standing vert.
DanTown8587
RealGM
Posts: 37,583
And1: 9,333
Joined: Jan 06, 2008
Location: Chicago
     

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1663 » by DanTown8587 » Tue Jun 4, 2019 11:35 am

coldfish wrote:
DanTown8587 wrote:
kodo wrote:While not really endorsing White myself, I'm surprised by the negativity around him.

Per minute, which is the only type of stat I think should be used for comparison of players, has White performing well along with other freshmen PGs recently.

Per 36 minutes
White: 20.3 ppg 5.2 apg 3.0 3PM 1.4 SPG 3.4 TO
D.Fox: 20.3 ppg 5.6 apg 0.5 3PM 1.8 SPG 2.0 TO
J.Murray: 20.5 ppg 2.2 apg 3.1 3PM 1.0 SPG 2.4 TO
D.Russell: 20.5 ppg 5.3 apg 2.7 3PM 1.7 SPG 3.1 TO


Logical question - why is per minute analysis a good measure? Wouldn't per possession be a better metric to compare since a guy playing in a significantly faster or slower paced system is going to look way better/worse?

Per 100
White: 29.6 points / 7.5 assists / 4.3 3s on .353% / 2.0 steals / 4.9 TO
Fox: 30.4 points / 8.3 assists / 0.9 3s on .252% / 2.7 steals / 4.4 TO
Murray (we calling him a PG now? On a team that started Tyler Ullis?): 33.3 points / 3.7 assists / 5.2 3s on .408% / 1.6 steals / 3.9 TO
Russell: 34.4 points / 8.9 assists (10.8 rebounds as well) / 4.8 3s on .411% / 2.8 steals / 5.2 TO

So here's the thing about those guys: Murray is wildly inconsistent and showed a pretty decent advantage on scoring (let's not forgot was a good defender + excellent rebounder); Russell was a #2 pick who flashed a little bit of everything in a way that I don't see how anyone could compare Russell's time at OSU to whatever White was at UNC; and Fox was a guy who wanted to score downhill (either it be the drive or the fast break) which is most similar to White's best playing and would be the most logical comp of these three but Fox also had massive improvement to his game.

My main problem with comps in terms of outcomes (besides the obvious survivor bias) is that player development at the NBA level is a random thing. In two of these cases (Russell and Fox) you would argue there was quite significant player development that occurred for them to become contributors as pros. That's impossible to put on anyone in the evaluation process.


Good post but I would disagree about the development thing. Some players want to be great and are willing to put the work in while taking advice. Others aren't. While I would argue that its hard for us to identify which people are going to develop and which ones aren't, NBA front offices have access to a lot more information than us. Its obviously not a perfect process, you can learn about the kids' character and work ethic and form a guess.

Its not easy to do though because everyone is going to want to sell you on the kid. Interviewing is a difficult skill but for those who are good at it, you stand a fair chance of weeding out the people you don't want. The Bulls seem to be generally good at weeding out the guys who aren't going to put in the effort. Its to the point where their draft decisions have pissed a lot of people off because they go for the try hard types so much.


NBA teams can but unless someone here is truly sourced or we get a one off indicator, it’s nearly impossible for any of us to predict future work ethic. Didn’t mean NBA evaluations when I said it but rather our evaluations.
...
User avatar
JohnnyTapwater
Analyst
Posts: 3,194
And1: 1,639
Joined: Nov 06, 2009
Location: Chicago
   

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1664 » by JohnnyTapwater » Tue Jun 4, 2019 12:27 pm

Michael Redd shot 31% from 3 in college.

Shot 38% from 3 in the NBA.

He's a virgo.

This is a case for the, 19 year old virgo, Cam Reddish.

I don't see why it's not plausible that he would improve with that repeatable stroke. He's going to mature mentally and work on it. I can guarantee that.
User avatar
Red Larrivee
RealGM
Posts: 42,375
And1: 19,312
Joined: Feb 15, 2007
Location: Hogging Microphone Time From Tom Dore

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1665 » by Red Larrivee » Tue Jun 4, 2019 12:34 pm

JohnnyTapwater wrote:Michael Redd shot 31% from 3 in college.

Shot 38% from 3 in the NBA.

He's a virgo.

This is a case for the, 19 year old virgo, Cam Reddish.

I don't see why it's not plausible that he would improve with that repeatable stroke. He's going to mature mentally and work on it. I can guarantee that.


Michael Redd was drafted in the second round. He's one of the all-time second round steals. Cam Reddish is going to be selected in the lottery.

Every selling point about Cam seems to rely on hoping he becomes an anomaly. That just isn't a good thought process. There's a long list of talented players who had ideal physical tools, but were poor at actually playing basketball. We traded LaMarcus Aldridge for one of them.

Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
sco
RealGM
Posts: 27,500
And1: 9,246
Joined: Sep 22, 2003
Location: Virtually Everywhere!

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1666 » by sco » Tue Jun 4, 2019 12:42 pm

I know why folks compare prospects with great NBA players in college or their rookie year, because it's easy and gives a sense of hope that some guy can be come great. I think the under-appreciated aspect of drafting great players is the willingness to work to become great.
:clap:
User avatar
coldfish
Forum Mod - Bulls
Forum Mod - Bulls
Posts: 60,769
And1: 38,141
Joined: Jun 11, 2004
Location: Right in the middle
   

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1667 » by coldfish » Tue Jun 4, 2019 12:50 pm

DanTown8587 wrote:
NBA teams can but unless someone here is truly sourced or we get a one off indicator, it’s nearly impossible for any of us to predict future work ethic. Didn’t mean NBA evaluations when I said it but rather our evaluations.


Agreed there. We should almost couch all of our posts on the draft with a qualifier: "If his background and interviews indicate he will work on the flaws of his game."

I've never really seen a draft like this. Virtually every prospect has some pretty big holes in his game all the way up to Zion. After Ja, they become rather significant. OTOH, there are a lot of players that have interesting physical profiles or backgrounds. I suspect that there will be a lot of gems in this draft 3-4 years from now and busts too. The guys that do well will be the ones that put in the work.

I sure hope that Pax doesn't put blinders on. Don't take a player just because he looks like he might fit with the current team. Its almost to the point where I wouldn't take BPA. I would go for the guy who looks like the one who is going to bust his rear to improve the most as long as his physical profile is NBA capable. The Jimmy Butler of the group.
cjbulls
Analyst
Posts: 3,584
And1: 1,301
Joined: Jun 26, 2018

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1668 » by cjbulls » Tue Jun 4, 2019 1:02 pm

Red Larrivee wrote:
JohnnyTapwater wrote:Michael Redd shot 31% from 3 in college.

Shot 38% from 3 in the NBA.

He's a virgo.

This is a case for the, 19 year old virgo, Cam Reddish.

I don't see why it's not plausible that he would improve with that repeatable stroke. He's going to mature mentally and work on it. I can guarantee that.


Michael Redd was drafted in the second round. He's one of the all-time second round steals. Cam Reddish is going to be selected in the lottery.

Every selling point about Cam seems to rely on hoping he becomes an anomaly. That just isn't a good thought process. There's a long list of talented players who had ideal physical tools, but were poor at actually playing basketball. We traded LaMarcus Aldridge for one of them.

Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk


Why does the fact he's projected to be drafted high change his comp? So if Milwaukee took him 14th that year you'd stop making this silly point? Perhaps teams have learned from past mistakes and can ignore freshman year stats as such a large factor in an evaluation.

Tyrus Thomas failed because of his attitude, not because of his talents.

No one is relying on an anomaly. There's a vast history of players taken because they possessed NBA traits and not having anything to do with their numbers.
Chi town
RealGM
Posts: 29,715
And1: 9,220
Joined: Aug 10, 2004

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1669 » by Chi town » Tue Jun 4, 2019 1:12 pm

coldfish wrote:
DanTown8587 wrote:
NBA teams can but unless someone here is truly sourced or we get a one off indicator, it’s nearly impossible for any of us to predict future work ethic. Didn’t mean NBA evaluations when I said it but rather our evaluations.


Agreed there. We should almost couch all of our posts on the draft with a qualifier: "If his background and interviews indicate he will work on the flaws of his game."

I've never really seen a draft like this. Virtually every prospect has some pretty big holes in his game all the way up to Zion. After Ja, they become rather significant. OTOH, there are a lot of players that have interesting physical profiles or backgrounds. I suspect that there will be a lot of gems in this draft 3-4 years from now and busts too. The guys that do well will be the ones that put in the work.

I sure hope that Pax doesn't put blinders on. Don't take a player just because he looks like he might fit with the current team. Its almost to the point where I wouldn't take BPA. I would go for the guy who looks like the one who is going to bust his rear to improve the most as long as his physical profile is NBA capable. The Jimmy Butler of the group.


And that guy is probably Hunter and Culver. Coach Beard has said repeatedly Culver is the only player that lives the game as much as him and works as hard as him. Hunter is a known worker with the year to year improvement to show it too.
panthermark
RealGM
Posts: 21,710
And1: 4,009
Joined: Mar 15, 2010
Location: Undisclosed: MJ's shadow could be lurking....
         

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1670 » by panthermark » Tue Jun 4, 2019 1:47 pm

cjbulls wrote:
Red Larrivee wrote:
JohnnyTapwater wrote:Michael Redd shot 31% from 3 in college.

Shot 38% from 3 in the NBA.

He's a virgo.

This is a case for the, 19 year old virgo, Cam Reddish.

I don't see why it's not plausible that he would improve with that repeatable stroke. He's going to mature mentally and work on it. I can guarantee that.


Michael Redd was drafted in the second round. He's one of the all-time second round steals. Cam Reddish is going to be selected in the lottery.

Every selling point about Cam seems to rely on hoping he becomes an anomaly. That just isn't a good thought process. There's a long list of talented players who had ideal physical tools, but were poor at actually playing basketball. We traded LaMarcus Aldridge for one of them.

Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk


Why does the fact he's projected to be drafted high change his comp? So if Milwaukee took him 14th that year you'd stop making this silly point? Perhaps teams have learned from past mistakes and can ignore freshman year stats as such a large factor in an evaluation.

Tyrus Thomas failed because of his attitude, not because of his talents.

No one is relying on an anomaly. There's a vast history of players taken because they possessed NBA traits and not having anything to do with their numbers.

It matters because we are picking 7th.
I would be perfectly fine taking Reddish at #38....or even #18....but he won't be there.
Jealousy is a sickness.......get well soon....
cjbulls
Analyst
Posts: 3,584
And1: 1,301
Joined: Jun 26, 2018

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1671 » by cjbulls » Tue Jun 4, 2019 2:09 pm

panthermark wrote:
cjbulls wrote:
Red Larrivee wrote:
Michael Redd was drafted in the second round. He's one of the all-time second round steals. Cam Reddish is going to be selected in the lottery.

Every selling point about Cam seems to rely on hoping he becomes an anomaly. That just isn't a good thought process. There's a long list of talented players who had ideal physical tools, but were poor at actually playing basketball. We traded LaMarcus Aldridge for one of them.

Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk


Why does the fact he's projected to be drafted high change his comp? So if Milwaukee took him 14th that year you'd stop making this silly point? Perhaps teams have learned from past mistakes and can ignore freshman year stats as such a large factor in an evaluation.

Tyrus Thomas failed because of his attitude, not because of his talents.

No one is relying on an anomaly. There's a vast history of players taken because they possessed NBA traits and not having anything to do with their numbers.

It matters because we are picking 7th.
I would be perfectly fine taking Reddish at #38....or even #18....but he won't be there.


Yes, it's almost as if the people who make these decisions for their livelihoods have decided that Cam has some value beyond an "anomaly's" chance of being good.
User avatar
Jvaughn
RealGM
Posts: 28,140
And1: 4,693
Joined: May 18, 2009
   

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1672 » by Jvaughn » Tue Jun 4, 2019 2:09 pm

MeloRoseNoah wrote:
Jvaughn wrote:
taj2133 wrote:
Read on Twitter


Honestly that's who his game style reminds me of much. Obviously not as good a shooter yet, but a better athlete and is willing to play defense. Not a bad get for mid to late lottery.


https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2815563-kevin-porter-jr-suspended-indefinitely-by-usc-due-to-personal-conduct-issues

Except that Kevin Porter Jr is a head case, who doesn't get to the free throw lines and only shoots free throws at 50%. Those are huge differences.

He's more like Lance Stephenson than James Harden.


No one gets to the line like Harden. I was more eluding to style of play. Shake on the dribble, step backs, handle, etc.

As for the headcase part, I never put much stock in those stories. We've seen far too many of those stories with kids who end up being productive pros with no evidence of those issues. Do we even know what his USC issues were? Pretty sure there were multiple player suspensions there this year. Says more about the program.
spearsy23 wrote:Kobe is a low percentage chucker just like Jennings, he's just better at it.


teamCHItown wrote:Now we have threads on what violent felons think of our Bulls. Great. Next up, OJ Simpson's take on a possible Taj Gibson extension.
User avatar
Red Larrivee
RealGM
Posts: 42,375
And1: 19,312
Joined: Feb 15, 2007
Location: Hogging Microphone Time From Tom Dore

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1673 » by Red Larrivee » Tue Jun 4, 2019 2:12 pm

cjbulls wrote:Why does the fact he's projected to be drafted high change his comp? So if Milwaukee took him 14th that year you'd stop making this silly point? Perhaps teams have learned from past mistakes and can ignore freshman year stats as such a large factor in an evaluation.

Tyrus Thomas failed because of his attitude, not because of his talents.

No one is relying on an anomaly. There's a vast history of players taken because they possessed NBA traits and not having anything to do with their numbers.


There isn't a vast number of players who bombed in college like Reddish and went on to become really good NBA players. Reddish has the statistical profile of a player who should barely be drafted.

The problem with ignoring college tape is that it's a dumb process. Should you ignore every other players tape as well? This is the highest level of competition any of these players have faced. It's a meaningful sample size.

Thomas failed not only because of attitude, but because of motor, work ethic, basketball IQ, decision-making and feel for the game. Some of these were factors that were apparent during college for him. The Bulls hoped it would improve and it didn't. There is a long, long list of players who fit this description.

Your stance seems to be that physical traits are the most important aspects of creating NBA stars, which couldn't be further from the truth. This earlier reply is a spot-on analogy of Reddish:

Axolotl wrote:For the life of me, I just can't wrap my head around Cam Reddish. When he does basketball things, he looks like someone decided to build a great basketball player, and came up with Cam. But when he plays basketball, it looks like whoever built Cam didn't know what a basketball player is supposed to actually do. Like a carpenter, who builds a violin with only a picture of a violin to guide him. The end result is gorgeous but unplayable.




Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
CoreyVillains
Head Coach
Posts: 7,007
And1: 1,833
Joined: Jun 22, 2004
Location: New York
Contact:
     

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1674 » by CoreyVillains » Tue Jun 4, 2019 2:14 pm



Culver really is a tough prospect to gauge. On one hand, he has every tool you’d want a player of his size to have. He has that secondary creator ability. Very good in the p&r. I almost like him for a lot of the reasons I like Garland. On the other hand, his shot is super broke. Really really broke. To me though he has a lot of Iggy potential as a guy who can do a little bit of everything on both sides of the ball but won’t ever lead your team as a number one option.
User avatar
coldfish
Forum Mod - Bulls
Forum Mod - Bulls
Posts: 60,769
And1: 38,141
Joined: Jun 11, 2004
Location: Right in the middle
   

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1675 » by coldfish » Tue Jun 4, 2019 2:15 pm

cjbulls wrote:
Red Larrivee wrote:
JohnnyTapwater wrote:Michael Redd shot 31% from 3 in college.

Shot 38% from 3 in the NBA.

He's a virgo.

This is a case for the, 19 year old virgo, Cam Reddish.

I don't see why it's not plausible that he would improve with that repeatable stroke. He's going to mature mentally and work on it. I can guarantee that.


Michael Redd was drafted in the second round. He's one of the all-time second round steals. Cam Reddish is going to be selected in the lottery.

Every selling point about Cam seems to rely on hoping he becomes an anomaly. That just isn't a good thought process. There's a long list of talented players who had ideal physical tools, but were poor at actually playing basketball. We traded LaMarcus Aldridge for one of them.

Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk


Why does the fact he's projected to be drafted high change his comp? So if Milwaukee took him 14th that year you'd stop making this silly point? Perhaps teams have learned from past mistakes and can ignore freshman year stats as such a large factor in an evaluation.

Tyrus Thomas failed because of his attitude, not because of his talents.

No one is relying on an anomaly. There's a vast history of players taken because they possessed NBA traits and not having anything to do with their numbers.


In general, if people base their positions on anecdotes in the draft, they will always be able to find an example to support their position.

I'll divide characteristics into physical (size and athleticism) and statistical (college stats). There are (oversimplified), 4 resulting groups.
1. Good stats, good physicals
2. Bad stats, good physicals
3. Good stats, bad physicals (McDermott)
4. Bad stats, bad physicals

There are only two people in this draft in category 1 and even Ja and Zion have asterisks. The category 4 people can basically be dismissed because they never work out.

Cat 2 people are depending on development to be impact players. Overall the hit rate on these people is low.
Cat 3 people are depending on finding a niche to be impact players. Overall the hit rate on these people is very low.

At the end of the day, the draft guys are combing the cat 2 group looking for which one might develop.
cjbulls
Analyst
Posts: 3,584
And1: 1,301
Joined: Jun 26, 2018

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1676 » by cjbulls » Tue Jun 4, 2019 2:50 pm

Red Larrivee wrote:
cjbulls wrote:Why does the fact he's projected to be drafted high change his comp? So if Milwaukee took him 14th that year you'd stop making this silly point? Perhaps teams have learned from past mistakes and can ignore freshman year stats as such a large factor in an evaluation.

Tyrus Thomas failed because of his attitude, not because of his talents.

No one is relying on an anomaly. There's a vast history of players taken because they possessed NBA traits and not having anything to do with their numbers.


There isn't a vast number of players who bombed in college like Reddish and went on to become really good NBA players. Reddish has the statistical profile of a player who should barely be drafted.

The problem with ignoring college tape is that it's a dumb process. Should you ignore every other players tape as well? This is the highest level of competition any of these players have faced. It's a meaningful sample size.

Thomas failed not only because of attitude, but because of motor, work ethic, basketball IQ, decision-making and feel for the game. Some of these were factors that were apparent during college for him. The Bulls hoped it would improve and it didn't. There is a long, long list of players who fit this description.

Your stance seems to be that physical traits are the most important aspects of creating NBA stars, which couldn't be further from the truth. This earlier reply is a spot-on analogy of Reddish:

Axolotl wrote:For the life of me, I just can't wrap my head around Cam Reddish. When he does basketball things, he looks like someone decided to build a great basketball player, and came up with Cam. But when he plays basketball, it looks like whoever built Cam didn't know what a basketball player is supposed to actually do. Like a carpenter, who builds a violin with only a picture of a violin to guide him. The end result is gorgeous but unplayable.




Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk


Who are the stars that don't have great physical traits and/or skill sets? Yes, the physical traits and skill sets are the #1 and #2 draftable issues. Cam excels in both of those. He struggles at translating those factors into his game situations at Duke consistently.

The analogy works for Cam. If the carpenter was introduced to the right teacher, he could learn how to build a playable violin, maybe even a great one. And he has the potential to build a better violin as compared to most of the other potential violin builders (except for 6 to 7!)
sh0ck
Starter
Posts: 2,417
And1: 1,024
Joined: Jan 25, 2017
 

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1677 » by sh0ck » Tue Jun 4, 2019 2:58 pm

CoreyVillains wrote:

Culver really is a tough prospect to gauge. On one hand, he has every tool you’d want a player of his size to have. He has that secondary creator ability. Very good in the p&r. I almost like him for a lot of the reasons I like Garland. On the other hand, his shot is super broke. Really really broke. To me though he has a lot of Iggy potential as a guy who can do a little bit of everything on both sides of the ball but won’t ever lead your team as a number one option.


Absolutely see this as well! The more I see clips of him play the more I see him as Andre Iguodala (which would be an amazing career for him).

One leg up I would say Culver has is his touch around the rim coming out of college. Although Iggy was a monster dunker early in his career, one of his weaknesses (still to this day) was his lack of touch. But he was so physically gifted that it didn't really prevent him from being a positive offensive player throughout his career (along with above average passing ability). Culver's ability to finish with either hand and ability to draw fouls could add another element to his game that would offset his streaky three point shooting.

Andre's had quite a great career (1x All-Star, 2x All-Defense, 1x Finals MVP), I would absolutely take that at #7 in this year's draft. He's the perfect complementary player to what the Bulls currently have in place too. If Culver is there at #7, man, that would be a blessing.
Hangtime84
RealGM
Posts: 21,063
And1: 4,763
Joined: Aug 18, 2006
Location: Rogers Park
     

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1678 » by Hangtime84 » Tue Jun 4, 2019 3:09 pm

coldfish wrote:
DanTown8587 wrote:
NBA teams can but unless someone here is truly sourced or we get a one off indicator, it’s nearly impossible for any of us to predict future work ethic. Didn’t mean NBA evaluations when I said it but rather our evaluations.


Agreed there. We should almost couch all of our posts on the draft with a qualifier: "If his background and interviews indicate he will work on the flaws of his game."

I've never really seen a draft like this. Virtually every prospect has some pretty big holes in his game all the way up to Zion. After Ja, they become rather significant. OTOH, there are a lot of players that have interesting physical profiles or backgrounds. I suspect that there will be a lot of gems in this draft 3-4 years from now and busts too. The guys that do well will be the ones that put in the work.

I sure hope that Pax doesn't put blinders on. Don't take a player just because he looks like he might fit with the current team. Its almost to the point where I wouldn't take BPA. I would go for the guy who looks like the one who is going to bust his rear to improve the most as long as his physical profile is NBA capable. The Jimmy Butler of the group.


That’s exactly where I’m at too. So many guys with holes I would pay attention to players past improvement paths and personality work ethics for me I’m high on Rui
Jcool0 wrote:
aguifs wrote:Do we have a friggin plan?


If the Bulls do, you would be complaining to much to ever hear it.


NBA fan logic we need to trade one of two best players because (Player X) one needs to shine more.
MrSparkle
RealGM
Posts: 23,430
And1: 11,216
Joined: Jul 31, 2003
Location: chicago

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1679 » by MrSparkle » Tue Jun 4, 2019 3:13 pm

sh0ck wrote:
CoreyVillains wrote:

Culver really is a tough prospect to gauge. On one hand, he has every tool you’d want a player of his size to have. He has that secondary creator ability. Very good in the p&r. I almost like him for a lot of the reasons I like Garland. On the other hand, his shot is super broke. Really really broke. To me though he has a lot of Iggy potential as a guy who can do a little bit of everything on both sides of the ball but won’t ever lead your team as a number one option.


Absolutely see this as well! The more I see clips of him play the more I see him as Andre Iguodala (which would be an amazing career for him).

One leg up I would say Culver has is his touch around the rim coming out of college. Although Iggy was a monster dunker early in his career, one of his weaknesses (still to this day) was his lack of touch. But he was so physically gifted that it didn't really prevent him from being a positive offensive player throughout his career (along with above average passing ability). Culver's ability to finish with either hand and ability to draw fouls could add another element to his game that would offset his streaky three point shooting.

Andre's had quite a great career (1x All-Star, 2x All-Defense, 1x Finals MVP), I would absolutely take that at #7 in this year's draft. He's the perfect complementary player to what the Bulls currently have in place too. If Culver is there at #7, man, that would be a blessing.


If Culver falls to #7 I'm good with him too. His lay-ups around the rim looked elite at the college level.
User avatar
coldfish
Forum Mod - Bulls
Forum Mod - Bulls
Posts: 60,769
And1: 38,141
Joined: Jun 11, 2004
Location: Right in the middle
   

Re: 2019 Draft Thread Volume #6 - Post Lottery 

Post#1680 » by coldfish » Tue Jun 4, 2019 3:14 pm

Hangtime84 wrote:
coldfish wrote:
DanTown8587 wrote:
NBA teams can but unless someone here is truly sourced or we get a one off indicator, it’s nearly impossible for any of us to predict future work ethic. Didn’t mean NBA evaluations when I said it but rather our evaluations.


Agreed there. We should almost couch all of our posts on the draft with a qualifier: "If his background and interviews indicate he will work on the flaws of his game."

I've never really seen a draft like this. Virtually every prospect has some pretty big holes in his game all the way up to Zion. After Ja, they become rather significant. OTOH, there are a lot of players that have interesting physical profiles or backgrounds. I suspect that there will be a lot of gems in this draft 3-4 years from now and busts too. The guys that do well will be the ones that put in the work.

I sure hope that Pax doesn't put blinders on. Don't take a player just because he looks like he might fit with the current team. Its almost to the point where I wouldn't take BPA. I would go for the guy who looks like the one who is going to bust his rear to improve the most as long as his physical profile is NBA capable. The Jimmy Butler of the group.


That’s exactly where I’m at too. So many guys with holes I would pay attention to players past improvement paths and personality work ethics for me I’m high on Rui


Atlanta is in such a great position. There is talk about them trading up but I would rather have 8 and 10 than any spot other than 1. Getting two of these guys doubles the odds of success as long as you aren't stupid. I really don't see a massive difference between RJ Barrett and some of the people being suggested around 10.

Return to Chicago Bulls