K4P wrote:Passing on Edwards and seeing him develop into a star wing would be the most painful draft miss in Wolves history
No way. Drafting Johnny Flynn over Curry gets that honor.
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K4P wrote:Passing on Edwards and seeing him develop into a star wing would be the most painful draft miss in Wolves history
Midw35t wrote:Nick K wrote:KGdaBom wrote:The problem with this is we don't draft the by far best player in the draft Wiseman just because we have one good center. No reason at all we can't move KAT to the PF where we have a void and play Wiseman at Center or we can play Wiseman at the PF.
I get your point and I normally would agree BUT would Rosas agree? From what we have seen so far it doesn't fit his small ball philosophy. Nobody wants a defensive rim protecting player next to Towns more than me. If he can score all the better.
With Rosas I just don't see him playing Towns at the 4.
I'm still concerned with Wiseman playing so few college games and then against easy matchups. It just leaves me with so many question about him. Every guy seems to be a gamble in this draft.
Last year was easy with Ja and Williamson and Ja was far more a certain star in my mind between the two. If Ja were in this draft I'd snap him up in a second PG or not and trade D'Lo or move him to off guard.
If Rosa's is picking for fit/system rather then best pure talent right now, with the #1 pick, then he is the wrong GM for us.
Klomp wrote:Slim Tubby wrote: I’m not saying Edwards will be a bust but any team that drafts him in the Top 5 is playing with fire.
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You can probably say that about any Top 5 guy, but teams can't just forfeit the top five. Picks will still need to be made.

Jedzz wrote:One of the players is really known because of instagram and his father's drummed up marketing as much as anything real. So how are you going to decide if Rosas has picked Best Pure Talent or not with the #1 pick.
tsherkin wrote:The important thing to take away here is that Klomp is wrong.
Esohny wrote:Why are you asking Klomp? "He's" actually a bot that posts random blurbs from a database.
Klomp wrote:I'm putting the tired in retired mod at the moment

Killboard wrote:Klomp wrote:Slim Tubby wrote: I’m not saying Edwards will be a bust but any team that drafts him in the Top 5 is playing with fire.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
You can probably say that about any Top 5 guy, but teams can't just forfeit the top five. Picks will still need to be made.
Not Hayes.
Shooting: Check
Passing&Vision: Check
Handling: Check
Defense: Check
Work Ethic: Check
Positional Size: Check
tsherkin wrote:The important thing to take away here is that Klomp is wrong.
Esohny wrote:Why are you asking Klomp? "He's" actually a bot that posts random blurbs from a database.
Klomp wrote:I'm putting the tired in retired mod at the moment
Klomp wrote:Jedzz wrote:One of the players is really known because of instagram and his father's drummed up marketing as much as anything real. So how are you going to decide if Rosas has picked Best Pure Talent or not with the #1 pick.
This is ridiculous to me. The world may have been introduced to him by social media/marketing, but that doesn't nullify the player's on-court ability. Social media stars don't get automatically vaulted to the top of the rankings without showing basketball talent and potential, otherwise Julian Newman would be at the top of all the 2021 mocks.
Klomp wrote:Killboard wrote:Klomp wrote:You can probably say that about any Top 5 guy, but teams can't just forfeit the top five. Picks will still need to be made.
Not Hayes.
Shooting: Check
Passing&Vision: Check
Handling: Check
Defense: Check
Work Ethic: Check
Positional Size: Check
You mean the Hayes who was a 29.4% shooter from the international 3-point line?
Klomp wrote:Killboard wrote:Klomp wrote:You can probably say that about any Top 5 guy, but teams can't just forfeit the top five. Picks will still need to be made.
Not Hayes.
Shooting: Check
Passing&Vision: Check
Handling: Check
Defense: Check
Work Ethic: Check
Positional Size: Check
You mean the Hayes who was a 29.4% shooter from the international 3-point line?
minimus wrote:Klomp wrote:Killboard wrote:
Not Hayes.
Shooting: Check
Passing&Vision: Check
Handling: Check
Defense: Check
Work Ethic: Check
Positional Size: Check
You mean the Hayes who was a 29.4% shooter from the international 3-point line?
He shot 87.6 percent at the stripe in 2019-20. Which gives hopes that he will be an efficient 3pt shooter in NBA. Also he has low release point, which might help him to adopt to NBA 3pt line
What sets up his attacking game off the dribble is the threat of his pull up jumper. Hayes has a lethal step-back jumper that's as devastating as any signature move of a player we've seen in this class, something the advanced numbers back up. A staggering 42% of his three-point shots off the dribble fell in Germany last year, something that if he comes even close to replicating in the NBA would be astonishing.
Killboard wrote:minimus wrote:Klomp wrote:You mean the Hayes who was a 29.4% shooter from the international 3-point line?
He shot 87.6 percent at the stripe in 2019-20. Which gives hopes that he will be an efficient 3pt shooter in NBA. Also he has low release point, which might help him to adopt to NBA 3pt lineWhat sets up his attacking game off the dribble is the threat of his pull up jumper. Hayes has a lethal step-back jumper that's as devastating as any signature move of a player we've seen in this class, something the advanced numbers back up. A staggering 42% of his three-point shots off the dribble fell in Germany last year, something that if he comes even close to replicating in the NBA would be astonishing.
https://in.nba.com/news/nba-draft-2020-killian-hayes-scouting-report-strengths-weaknesses-and-player-comparison/m71jtfjtighmzh5yepae4tj2
That's because he is extremely left-hand dominant and struggles mightily with his right. Whether it's dribbling to his right, finishing with his right, or passing with his right it doesn't come easily at all for Hayes and for that reason he avoids it at all costs. Oftentimes Hayes will choose not to take an open driving lane if it's to his right hand and on a number of occasions he forced up awkward left-handed floaters instead of attempting open right-hand layups.
It hasn't hurt him a ton in Europe but in the NBA teams are going to force him to his right in pick and roll settings and he'll be challenged to make responsible weak hand plays.
Right now Hayes is a bit of a burst defender who will show effort for brief moments of glory when it means a huge block or steal but he's far from consistent on that end.
Only hitting 18% of his threes off the catch last season he wasn't a threat off the ball and that could spell trouble for him as a young NBA player. It's likely that he isn't going to step right into an offensive initiator role with the ball in his hands and for that reason he'll need to be a floor spacer who can hit shots. Luckily he was a 91% free throw shooter which suggests he has a pretty good stroke but right now it hasn't been fully realized.
Projected NBA Draft Position: 3-8
Projected NBA Role: Pick and roll guard.
NBA Comparison: D'Angelo Russell
urinesane wrote:Killboard wrote:minimus wrote:
He shot 87.6 percent at the stripe in 2019-20. Which gives hopes that he will be an efficient 3pt shooter in NBA. Also he has low release point, which might help him to adopt to NBA 3pt lineWhat sets up his attacking game off the dribble is the threat of his pull up jumper. Hayes has a lethal step-back jumper that's as devastating as any signature move of a player we've seen in this class, something the advanced numbers back up. A staggering 42% of his three-point shots off the dribble fell in Germany last year, something that if he comes even close to replicating in the NBA would be astonishing.
https://in.nba.com/news/nba-draft-2020-killian-hayes-scouting-report-strengths-weaknesses-and-player-comparison/m71jtfjtighmzh5yepae4tj2That's because he is extremely left-hand dominant and struggles mightily with his right. Whether it's dribbling to his right, finishing with his right, or passing with his right it doesn't come easily at all for Hayes and for that reason he avoids it at all costs. Oftentimes Hayes will choose not to take an open driving lane if it's to his right hand and on a number of occasions he forced up awkward left-handed floaters instead of attempting open right-hand layups.
It hasn't hurt him a ton in Europe but in the NBA teams are going to force him to his right in pick and roll settings and he'll be challenged to make responsible weak hand plays.
Right now Hayes is a bit of a burst defender who will show effort for brief moments of glory when it means a huge block or steal but he's far from consistent on that end.Only hitting 18% of his threes off the catch last season he wasn't a threat off the ball and that could spell trouble for him as a young NBA player. It's likely that he isn't going to step right into an offensive initiator role with the ball in his hands and for that reason he'll need to be a floor spacer who can hit shots. Luckily he was a 91% free throw shooter which suggests he has a pretty good stroke but right now it hasn't been fully realized.
Projected NBA Draft Position: 3-8
Projected NBA Role: Pick and roll guard.
NBA Comparison: D'Angelo Russell
So he could potentially become the guy we already have?
Killboard wrote:urinesane wrote:That's because he is extremely left-hand dominant and struggles mightily with his right. Whether it's dribbling to his right, finishing with his right, or passing with his right it doesn't come easily at all for Hayes and for that reason he avoids it at all costs. Oftentimes Hayes will choose not to take an open driving lane if it's to his right hand and on a number of occasions he forced up awkward left-handed floaters instead of attempting open right-hand layups.
It hasn't hurt him a ton in Europe but in the NBA teams are going to force him to his right in pick and roll settings and he'll be challenged to make responsible weak hand plays.
Right now Hayes is a bit of a burst defender who will show effort for brief moments of glory when it means a huge block or steal but he's far from consistent on that end.Only hitting 18% of his threes off the catch last season he wasn't a threat off the ball and that could spell trouble for him as a young NBA player. It's likely that he isn't going to step right into an offensive initiator role with the ball in his hands and for that reason he'll need to be a floor spacer who can hit shots. Luckily he was a 91% free throw shooter which suggests he has a pretty good stroke but right now it hasn't been fully realized.
Projected NBA Draft Position: 3-8
Projected NBA Role: Pick and roll guard.
NBA Comparison: D'Angelo Russell
So he could potentially become the guy we already have?
That's an opinion. Anybody can have one. Still, I feel better when it is backed up with some evidence. The link was mostly provided for his off the dribble efficency, which is clearly the hardest to come around. The kid seems to have it figured out already.
1) Multiple ball handlers is a good thing. It's also a good thing they are both 6'5 and over 6'9 wingpsan.
2) I really liked Dlo coming into the draft. I'm much higher on Hayes defense, specially his ability to fight screens. He has a much better frame than Dlo to do that.
3) His weakness is definety his right hand. That's not to say he can't drive to his right but that he struggles when defenses commit multiple defenders and he needs to go to his right. He is among the youngest player in the draft though, and already has been putting work on it:
urinesane wrote:This entire forum is based on opinions, even when stats are used, people only pick the ones that support their own arguments.
Killboard wrote:urinesane wrote:This entire forum is based on opinions, even when stats are used, people only pick the ones that support their own arguments.
I edited added a point, but didn't delete anything.
Sure, still I feel better when people bring it, because it lets me have a more well informed opinion.
urinesane wrote:Killboard wrote:urinesane wrote:This entire forum is based on opinions, even when stats are used, people only pick the ones that support their own arguments.
I edited added a point, but didn't delete anything.
Sure, still I feel better when people bring it, because it lets me have a more well informed opinion.
What pick would you use to draft him?
Killboard wrote:Klomp wrote:Slim Tubby wrote: I’m not saying Edwards will be a bust but any team that drafts him in the Top 5 is playing with fire.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
You can probably say that about any Top 5 guy, but teams can't just forfeit the top five. Picks will still need to be made.
Not Hayes.
Shooting: Check
Passing&Vision: Check
Handling: Check
Defense: Check
Work Ethic: Check
Positional Size: Check
KGdaBom wrote:Killboard wrote:Klomp wrote:You can probably say that about any Top 5 guy, but teams can't just forfeit the top five. Picks will still need to be made.
Not Hayes.
Shooting: Check
Passing&Vision: Check
Handling: Check
Defense: Check
Work Ethic: Check
Positional Size: Check
I don't know about the rest, but I wouldn't give shooting a check.
Killboard wrote:KGdaBom wrote:Killboard wrote:
Not Hayes.
Shooting: Check
Passing&Vision: Check
Handling: Check
Defense: Check
Work Ethic: Check
Positional Size: Check
I don't know about the rest, but I wouldn't give shooting a check.
42% 3pt off the dribble (86 total) and 87% FT it's a pass for me. I suppose we will know for sure in a couple of years.
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