winsomme2 wrote:bucknersrevenge wrote:winsomme2 wrote:
Certainly Grant WIlliams was given plenty of time given his rookie status. He has showed some abilities but he is definitely undersized to make a huge impact.
Some of the impact players from the last draft were on bad teams but others were not. Tyler Herro, Goga Bitadze, Brandon Clarke, Matisse Thybulle, among others were able to step in to bench roles and contribute to playoff teams.
I expect players in this upcoming draft to do the same.
I do agree that some players take a while to blossom but I think you can for the most part see pretty early on what you're gonna get from a player.
I just think the idea that we need to trade these picks because we're so close to a run at a Title isn't completely needed. I would have no problem trading picks for a top notch bench player but at the same time I think we could certainly pick someone that will contribute right away.
"championship calibre" "make a huge impact"
Again, no diss but still, I'm getting a lot of buzz words but not enough substance here. What does ",ake a huge impact" actually mean? Because I don't know what's in your head. What exactly were your expectations of Grant Williams when we drafted him? I know he surpassed mine, certainly on defense. Grant has absolutely contributed to a playoff team. What exactly is it you're looking for in a contribution?
Two issues with this draft, there's nobody we will draft at 17 or anywhere we're picking that Brad is going to trust more than the guys we already have. That's about as close to a fact as it gets without being 100%. I could buy the argument of maybe signing an MLE type like a Bertans, or Bjelica, or Harry Giles as was mentioned above. That said, since when is Danny the type to trade a drafted asset before he knows it's true value unless the deal is so obvious a no-brainer that he has to do it? If you're advocating maybe signing 1 veteran to a deal to add to the team, I won't argue; especially if Kanter decides to opt out. But we're the least experienced team in the league. Our window is on the precipice of being thrust open. Let's just sit back for a minute and really see how good we are first before doing anything else.
I'm not a huge stats guy so I can't necessarily give you the specifics you might be looking for, but it's pretty clear that if we had drafted Brandon Clarke we wouldn't need to sign a guy like Harry Giles because Brandon Clarke would be locked up and cost controlled for years to come.
You can fall back on the draft being a crapshoot but that's only true to an extent. I think Brandon Clarke was a pretty sure bet especially where he went and considering we had such a hole in the middle it seems like a pick like that should have been a no brainer.
Danny has another shot this year with 3 first rounders. If he's able to swing a trade for a reliable vet, I'll be on board, but he has to use these picks better because there are going to be reliable players who will make an immediate impact where we are picking. Even if he hits on just one, that's a spot that will be cost controlled for a solid championship run in the next few years.
Well...s**t. Congratulations. winsomme, you found a soft spot. I too wanted Clarke during the draft. And I was a little upset that we did not get him. Here's the thing about that though. There will always be guys that you would've rather seen drafted than the guys we got. Doesn't mean that the guy we ended up with can't do the job. Maybe if we had drafted Clarke we'd be sitting here wondering about HIS impact right now. Or maybe we'd be talking about signing a different guy to fill in where Williams is doing so well.
But that said this discussion will be forever a moving target because you only know what "impact" looks like for you. Since I don't, I'll tell you what it looks like for me.
Last offseason we lost Al Horford and Aron Baynes. Our 2 best defensive big men. We replaced them with Theis playing more minutes, defensive stalwart Enes Kanter, and Grant Williams playing some in the middle. Going into the shutdown Boston was 3rd in the league defending the paint and 4th in overall defensive efficiency.
Watch this video. More specifically, don't just watch the end result of the plays, watch the defensive IQ and the intelligent rotations. Watch what he does BEFORE the play is made. See him being in the right spot all the time. Watch his verticality and his footwork to stay in front of his man. Rookies are not supposed to show this level of IQ on defense, nor this level of versatility.
;t=307s
You watch that and tell me that's not having an impact on team that lost its 2 best interior defenders and still sits atop most defensive metrics. He doesn't play a ton, nor every game, but when he's in there he usually does the right thing. And if you're worrying about ppg as your metric, that narrative can hit the bricks. We start 4 guys capable of scoring 20 on a given night. And if one of those guys isn't there, Marcus Smart, Daniel Theis, or offensive post guy Enes Kanter is picking up that slack. I don't need offense from Grant Williams. Our top 7 guys should be responsible for all of the offense. We don't have to count on rookies for scoring stats.
The Bucks, Lakers, and Clippers are all real title contenders. Quick, without looking anything up, how are the rookies on those teams impacting their teams?