Red Larrivee wrote:Dresden wrote:I also don't understand the line: "I think people make the mistake of believing that all players with upside have superstar upside. " If people thought Kawhi or Paul George or Pascal Siakam had superstar upside, they wouldn't have lasted to midway through the first round, would they? You just don't know sometimes, but you can at least look for certain measurables. And when a prospect fits the prototype of the modern nba wing- long, athletic, can handle the ball, can score at all three levels- AND was highly productive in high school as well--- you have to think someone like is as likely as anyone to be a very high level player.
Measurements don't create stars though. The Bulls know that better than anyone with Tyrus Thomas and Tyson Chandler.
It's about intangibles, decision-making, basketball IQ, and instincts. That's why you can't get too caught up in tools; otherwise, Cam Reddish and Kevin Knox would be absolute studs. Some people see an athletic 6'8 forward with a great high school reel and automatically assume superstar upside. Athleticism and measurements are simply the natural advantages you have if you figure the finer parts out.
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True, but those intangibles you mention are pretty hard to see in advance. that's why Kawhi and George lasted as long as they did in the draft. Same with Jimmy Butler. But with Porter, injury aside, there was no compelling reason to believe he lacked in any of the intangibles you mentioned. His dad was a coach, there was nothing about his film that showed a lack of instincts or BBIQ. You can't know everything about a player before you draft him, but Porter checked all the boxes, aside from his injury history.
And while you can't take "tools" as an absolute guarantee, there are big reasons why players who do have the necessary tools get drafted ahead of those who don't. It's a necessary pre-requisite to being a great player, other than rare exceptions like Luka Doncic or Steph Curry. that's why the Bulls took Tony Snell- he had the physical characteristics as a guy like Kawhi did. Turns out, he didn't have the intangibles. Jimmy Butler also had the "tools"- very athletic, strong, etc. And he did have the intangibles, that no one saw until he was in the league 2-3 years.


















