Indeed wrote:Dalek wrote:Indeed wrote:
Not surprised Stewart being a NBA size ready would dominate, but Nnaji has a higher ceiling.
The biggest concern with Stewart is some of his advantage/strength being transferable to the NBA level, particularly using his size to get into his spot where it works out in college. Meanwhile, Nnaji would be a slightly higher ceiling with a bit more risk. At the end, both maybe a backup big, similar to Patterson and Poeltl, being a borderline starter / role player, I don't envision them being better than Ibaka.
This higher ceiling thing is where evaluators have to be careful because it ignores the intangibles at times. Nnaji has a lot of good skills, but he doesn't always run hard down the floor, and gets beaten to rebounds due to effort. I think he feels like more of a finesse big - just judging by how he finishes in traffic. Of all guys he reminds me Chris Bosh with his artistic temperament and niceness. Not sure that he translates well to the NBA.
Look at the video of Nnaji against Okongvu where there are quite a few issues with getting into better spots and being late to recover:
I agreed, and I mentioned a bit more risk because of that. Stewart is definitely the better player right now, it is up to the team who drafts them based on immediate need plus risk tolerance.
Meanwhile, I don't see how Steward outplayed Okongwu, they looked pretty even.
In Seattle in their only Pac-12 matchup (Okongwu didn't play in their second meeting) UW beat USC 72-40 while both McDaniels & Stewart where blocking Okongwu's shots all over the place had him scared (& USC) to shoot in the paint.
For the game Stewart had 18pts/10rebs while Okongwu had 10pts/9rebs. Stewart shot 6-12. Okongwu shot 4-13.











