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Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread

Moderators: Knightro, UCFJayBird, Def Swami, Howard Mass, ChosenSavior, UCF

What kind of player do you think we need most?

Point Guard
8
13%
Scoring Guard
38
62%
Great Shooter
11
18%
3&D Wing
4
7%
 
Total votes: 61

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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2041 » by Xatticus » Sun Nov 8, 2020 5:54 pm

pepe1991 wrote:
KillMonger wrote:Lmao...... Toppin.... Unathletic Gordon..... That legit made me laugh


Well he isn't unathletic, but not as athletic as Gordon but after that what execlly is his basketball strenght?
He is 6'9 and in nba other than center what a hell he can play?

Kenneth Faried type players have no role in modern basketball, at least on good teams.
His jump hooks are only workable in fashion he is using them at college level, and have zero implemetation sucess in nba. For start, once he is in NBA, standing at 6'9 will be very close to average nba size player. In other words, one Paul George, who has no issue playing SG, will be his size.

Him being 6'9 -225 means, at against centers he will always be 3-4 inches shorter, and at least on start- 30 -40 even 50 pounds lighter. In other words, his game does not translate in nba.

for 2 years at college, his outside shooting was limited on 43 threes made. On top of that he is 4 months away from turning 23.
Where execlly his advanced skills will come from ? He won't become high usage shooter now, that's a given. His body doesn't have that much time to develop, he is too old for it. He is poor passer, complete no treat as ball handler.

So homless version of Blake Griffin or Gordon, very similar player to Kenneth Faried? He is type of guy who last year would not be touched before 25-35 pick range.
If my player has only strenght- being good at catching lobs, i'm betting 7 footer will always do it better than 6'9 guy.


He will be a good offensive player. He is too good at finishing not to be. He can shoot a bit as well. If he can become a solid screener, he will be a terrific roll man, especially if he plays alongside a competent point guard. He has already demonstrated the ability to pass a bit, so he should be able to learn to pass from the short roll. That's an offensive weapon.

The problem is that he will have no value at the defensive end. He's going to hurt you. His best position will be center, but having a center that can't defend the rim hurts. You want to pair him with someone like Isaac. Even still, he is going to hurt your defense. Everyone needs rim protection, so it hurts when you have to put someone at the premium rim-protection position that doesn't provide rim protection. This is the same problem we have with Vucevic. Traditional fours are modern fives. It's just hard to hide a four that can't defend on the perimeter in the modern NBA. If they can't protect the rim either, you have a significant problem.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2042 » by Xatticus » Sun Nov 8, 2020 5:56 pm

The Real Dalic wrote:
SOUL wrote:We have no idea how any of these guys will translate. Can take sneak peeks from their college/overseas career and try to apply it but if it was that easy every draft would be cut and dry best players to worst players. I hope at our position (or if we move up) we can find someone that can score in multiple ways and get easy baskets. We have an issue with scoring when we absolutely need a bucket.

Yes please. That's why I want anyone that can score at a high level. I would look at players like Kira Lewis Jr. at our pick. If we move up, Haliburton or someone like that would be great. Don't care who it is, as long as they can score. People can suggest whoever they want to me since I don't know much about this draft, but all I know is that we need to address scoring. We have the draft, trades, and FA to figure it out. Don't care if it makes us worse for this season either.


Eh... we need good offensive players. That's not synonymous with scoring. Some people score a lot, but hurt their team's offense. Some people score little, but are very good offensive players.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2043 » by Bensational » Sun Nov 8, 2020 7:24 pm

pepe1991 wrote:i get where Blue _and_white comming from

This draft has, across the board that " MIkal Bridgest can be star" type of vibe, where you are trying to convince yourself into something you don't belive.
I had same issue with myself about D'angelo Russell, for 2 years straight i tried to talk myself into notion that is not that bad. And now, 5 years later, f*** it, D'angelo Russell is definition of mediocrity without leash.

Let's go through some prospects and their reality:
Edwards, 30% usage rate 2,8 assists. Guy is either blind or selfish. Probably both.
Wiseman. 7 footer who at college level did not face player taller than 6'10. Imo once again, huge gap between what scouts belive he can be and what he is today. His videos of him taking people of dribble are copy past same type of crap Thon Maker was allegedly going to do. Spoiler alert : centers don't dribble. Never were, and probably never going to do. That's why you have ballhandlers.

Avdija. Can't really shoot, isn't that athletic. His "playmaking" is force-fed and telegraphed.

Okongwu- 6'9 no advanced skills center. Hello Tristan Thompson.

Lamelo Ball- strip Lonzo from athletical ability and defense and you drafted 6'7 Elfrid Payton with ego of Rodman.

Toppin. Unathletic Gordon.

Hayes- slower D'angleo Russell. Guy can't take players off dribble in Germany. Get a f*** away with that crap.

Vassell- i can already see espn breaking news " Devin Vassell is hiring XY to teach him how to shoot".

What annoys me the most is Vassell. How do guys like him, Lonzo, Lamelo get to their 20s without single coach telling them YOU CAN'T SHOOT LIKE THAT.
What a **** is that jumper? Throwing stone ?

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Devin Vassell looks to have completely changed his jumpshot a month before the draft. This is form is not what made him a top ten pick


Yeah, fair enough, that's the classic Pepe pessimistic take, but if you had to pick the players who could potentially be steals, who is that and why?

Because the talent is more often than not still hiding somewhere from pick 10 onwards.

2018 - (11) SGA, (14) MPJr / (2nd Rnd) Graham, Robinson, Milton
2017 - (13) Mitchell, (14) Bam, (>15) White / (2nd Rnd) Brooks
2016 - (11) Sabonis (>15) Levert, Siakam, / (2nd Rnd) Brogdon
2015 - (13) Booker / (2nd Rnd) Harrell, Powell
2014 - (13) Lavine, (14) Warren, (>15) Nurkic, Bogdanovic, / (2nd Rnd) Dinwiddie, J.Grant, Jokic
2013 - (10) CJ, (12) Adams, (15) Giannis, (>15) Gobert
2012 - (>15) Fournier, / (2nd Rnd) Draymond, Middleton

So yeah, there's a lot of misses in between those hits cos that's the notable names from 45 picks per year. Roughly 30/315 players or 9.5%.

I know not all drafts are created equal, but there's a history of names above of players who dropped to later positions because their scouting report described them as "unathletic Gordon" or something like that, and it turned out they were a lot more.

So if you had to drill into some guys, who do you think has the potential to become a surprisingly decent player (or much better) like the names above?
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2044 » by pepe1991 » Sun Nov 8, 2020 8:47 pm

Bensational wrote:
pepe1991 wrote:i get where Blue _and_white comming from

This draft has, across the board that " MIkal Bridgest can be star" type of vibe, where you are trying to convince yourself into something you don't belive.
I had same issue with myself about D'angelo Russell, for 2 years straight i tried to talk myself into notion that is not that bad. And now, 5 years later, f*** it, D'angelo Russell is definition of mediocrity without leash.

Let's go through some prospects and their reality:
Edwards, 30% usage rate 2,8 assists. Guy is either blind or selfish. Probably both.
Wiseman. 7 footer who at college level did not face player taller than 6'10. Imo once again, huge gap between what scouts belive he can be and what he is today. His videos of him taking people of dribble are copy past same type of crap Thon Maker was allegedly going to do. Spoiler alert : centers don't dribble. Never were, and probably never going to do. That's why you have ballhandlers.

Avdija. Can't really shoot, isn't that athletic. His "playmaking" is force-fed and telegraphed.

Okongwu- 6'9 no advanced skills center. Hello Tristan Thompson.

Lamelo Ball- strip Lonzo from athletical ability and defense and you drafted 6'7 Elfrid Payton with ego of Rodman.

Toppin. Unathletic Gordon.

Hayes- slower D'angleo Russell. Guy can't take players off dribble in Germany. Get a f*** away with that crap.

Vassell- i can already see espn breaking news " Devin Vassell is hiring XY to teach him how to shoot".

What annoys me the most is Vassell. How do guys like him, Lonzo, Lamelo get to their 20s without single coach telling them YOU CAN'T SHOOT LIKE THAT.
What a **** is that jumper? Throwing stone ?

Joe Casey
@Joe_Casey1
Devin Vassell looks to have completely changed his jumpshot a month before the draft. This is form is not what made him a top ten pick


Yeah, fair enough, that's the classic Pepe pessimistic take, but if you had to pick the players who could potentially be steals, who is that and why?

Because the talent is more often than not still hiding somewhere from pick 10 onwards.

2018 - (11) SGA, (14) MPJr / (2nd Rnd) Graham, Robinson, Milton
2017 - (13) Mitchell, (14) Bam, (>15) White / (2nd Rnd) Brooks
2016 - (11) Sabonis (>15) Levert, Siakam, / (2nd Rnd) Brogdon
2015 - (13) Booker / (2nd Rnd) Harrell, Powell
2014 - (13) Lavine, (14) Warren, (>15) Nurkic, Bogdanovic, / (2nd Rnd) Dinwiddie, J.Grant, Jokic
2013 - (10) CJ, (12) Adams, (15) Giannis, (>15) Gobert
2012 - (>15) Fournier, / (2nd Rnd) Draymond, Middleton

So yeah, there's a lot of misses in between those hits cos that's the notable names from 45 picks per year. Roughly 30/315 players or 9.5%.

I know not all drafts are created equal, but there's a history of names above of players who dropped to later positions because their scouting report described them as "unathletic Gordon" or something like that, and it turned out they were a lot more.

So if you had to drill into some guys, who do you think has the potential to become a surprisingly decent player (or much better) like the names above?



and 30 teams are there to draft, so devide sucess rate by 30 to get actually chance to hit. :dontknow:

For example ,history of 4th overall pick. This is very, very high lottery pick and objective chance to draft there if you are one of worst teams in nba.

Since Russell Westbrook was taken 4th , 12 years ago, this is histroy of that draft slot



Year Player School/Country – Team

2019 De’Andre Hunter – Atlanta Hawks
2018 Jaren Jackson Jr., Michigan State – Memphis Grizzlies
2017 Josh Jackson, Kansas – Phoenix Suns
2016 Dragan Bender, Israel – Phoenix Suns
2015 Kristaps Porzingis, Baloncesta Sevilla – New York Knicks
2014 Aaron Gordon, Arizona – Orlando Magic
2013 Cody Zeller, Indiana – Charlotte Bobcats
2012 Dion Waiters, Syracuse – Cleveland Cavaliers
2011 Tristan Thompson, Texas – Cleveland Cavaliers
2010 Wesley Johnson, Syracuse – Minnesota Timberwolves
2009 Tyreke Evans, Memphis – Sacramento Kings

And even if you track names of a teams, you get same old usual suspects. T wolves, Kings, Cavs, Suns. Teams that are in deep lottery every year but have no future nor present, and nothing changed for 10 + years.

Similar thing is with other picks as well, ofc winning lottery is best "strategy " to get talent, however you can "plot" your path toward 1st pick. YOu still need s*** loud of luck to get 1# pick.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2045 » by Bensational » Sun Nov 8, 2020 11:13 pm

pepe1991 wrote:
Bensational wrote:
pepe1991 wrote:i get where Blue _and_white comming from

This draft has, across the board that " MIkal Bridgest can be star" type of vibe, where you are trying to convince yourself into something you don't belive.
I had same issue with myself about D'angelo Russell, for 2 years straight i tried to talk myself into notion that is not that bad. And now, 5 years later, f*** it, D'angelo Russell is definition of mediocrity without leash.

Let's go through some prospects and their reality:
Edwards, 30% usage rate 2,8 assists. Guy is either blind or selfish. Probably both.
Wiseman. 7 footer who at college level did not face player taller than 6'10. Imo once again, huge gap between what scouts belive he can be and what he is today. His videos of him taking people of dribble are copy past same type of crap Thon Maker was allegedly going to do. Spoiler alert : centers don't dribble. Never were, and probably never going to do. That's why you have ballhandlers.

Avdija. Can't really shoot, isn't that athletic. His "playmaking" is force-fed and telegraphed.

Okongwu- 6'9 no advanced skills center. Hello Tristan Thompson.

Lamelo Ball- strip Lonzo from athletical ability and defense and you drafted 6'7 Elfrid Payton with ego of Rodman.

Toppin. Unathletic Gordon.

Hayes- slower D'angleo Russell. Guy can't take players off dribble in Germany. Get a f*** away with that crap.

Vassell- i can already see espn breaking news " Devin Vassell is hiring XY to teach him how to shoot".

What annoys me the most is Vassell. How do guys like him, Lonzo, Lamelo get to their 20s without single coach telling them YOU CAN'T SHOOT LIKE THAT.
What a **** is that jumper? Throwing stone ?



Yeah, fair enough, that's the classic Pepe pessimistic take, but if you had to pick the players who could potentially be steals, who is that and why?

Because the talent is more often than not still hiding somewhere from pick 10 onwards.

2018 - (11) SGA, (14) MPJr / (2nd Rnd) Graham, Robinson, Milton
2017 - (13) Mitchell, (14) Bam, (>15) White / (2nd Rnd) Brooks
2016 - (11) Sabonis (>15) Levert, Siakam, / (2nd Rnd) Brogdon
2015 - (13) Booker / (2nd Rnd) Harrell, Powell
2014 - (13) Lavine, (14) Warren, (>15) Nurkic, Bogdanovic, / (2nd Rnd) Dinwiddie, J.Grant, Jokic
2013 - (10) CJ, (12) Adams, (15) Giannis, (>15) Gobert
2012 - (>15) Fournier, / (2nd Rnd) Draymond, Middleton

So yeah, there's a lot of misses in between those hits cos that's the notable names from 45 picks per year. Roughly 30/315 players or 9.5%.

I know not all drafts are created equal, but there's a history of names above of players who dropped to later positions because their scouting report described them as "unathletic Gordon" or something like that, and it turned out they were a lot more.

So if you had to drill into some guys, who do you think has the potential to become a surprisingly decent player (or much better) like the names above?



and 30 teams are there to draft, so devide sucess rate by 30 to get actually chance to hit. :dontknow:

For example ,history of 4th overall pick. This is very, very high lottery pick and objective chance to draft there if you are one of worst teams in nba.

Since Russell Westbrook was taken 4th , 12 years ago, this is histroy of that draft slot



Year Player School/Country – Team

2019 De’Andre Hunter – Atlanta Hawks
2018 Jaren Jackson Jr., Michigan State – Memphis Grizzlies
2017 Josh Jackson, Kansas – Phoenix Suns
2016 Dragan Bender, Israel – Phoenix Suns
2015 Kristaps Porzingis, Baloncesta Sevilla – New York Knicks
2014 Aaron Gordon, Arizona – Orlando Magic
2013 Cody Zeller, Indiana – Charlotte Bobcats
2012 Dion Waiters, Syracuse – Cleveland Cavaliers
2011 Tristan Thompson, Texas – Cleveland Cavaliers
2010 Wesley Johnson, Syracuse – Minnesota Timberwolves
2009 Tyreke Evans, Memphis – Sacramento Kings

And even if you track names of a teams, you get same old usual suspects. T wolves, Kings, Cavs, Suns. Teams that are in deep lottery every year but have no future nor present, and nothing changed for 10 + years.

Similar thing is with other picks as well, ofc winning lottery is best "strategy " to get talent, however you can "plot" your path toward 1st pick. YOu still need s*** loud of luck to get 1# pick.


What? That has nothing do with my point that within a 45 pick range there has historically been good talent still on the board.

I'm challenging you to try to figure out who in this draft might be one of those players, rather than hitting the entire draft class with a ceiling of Mikal Bridges. Clearly, a lot of players have shown they can transcend scouting reports - can you figure out who it will be?
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2046 » by VFX » Mon Nov 9, 2020 3:30 am

Pepe makes it sound like players didn’t get into the nba via draft.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2047 » by KillMonger » Mon Nov 9, 2020 4:46 am

MagicMatic wrote:Pepe makes it sound like players didn’t get into the nba via draft.

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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2048 » by pepe1991 » Mon Nov 9, 2020 10:15 am

MagicMatic wrote:Pepe makes it sound like players didn’t get into the nba via draft.


Yes, because that's for a young player only way how he can even get to nba.
But there is difference between using lottery as only path toward "saving" team and adding talent, and using nba draft as pool where you can add valuable, or in some cases superstar -type players.

For every first overall pick Lebron and Anthony Davis there is Bennett, Bargnani, Wiggins, Bogut, Kenyon Martin.
For every second overall pick like Durant there is Thabeet, Beasley, MKG, Turner, Derrick Williams.


Reality of drafting is that it's constant cycle of trial and errors. Teams take young players, give them time, most of them fail, they try new guys and cycle keeps going.


https://threesandlayups.com/2019/05/15/how-likely-is-each-draft-pick-to-someday-make-an-all-star-team/

article goes in depth how drafting allstar is more luck than anything else. Also this odds are much worst if you know what "drafting allstar means". It means drafting player who at some point made single allstar apperance. There is army of average players who did it, but who are not really stars let alone superstars. Tyson Chandler, who was complete bust for first 10 years of his career, as former 2# pick also inflates " allstar in high lottery" . Over a years guys like Korver, Horford,Wally Szczerbiak. Noah, Hibbert...
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2049 » by basketballRob » Mon Nov 9, 2020 1:01 pm

I'm convinced Haliburton will be a star.

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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2050 » by Knightro » Mon Nov 9, 2020 1:28 pm

pepe1991 wrote:
MagicMatic wrote:Pepe makes it sound like players didn’t get into the nba via draft.


Yes, because that's for a young player only way how he can even get to nba.
But there is difference between using lottery as only path toward "saving" team and adding talent, and using nba draft as pool where you can add valuable, or in some cases superstar -type players.

For every first overall pick Lebron and Anthony Davis there is Bennett, Bargnani, Wiggins, Bogut, Kenyon Martin.
For every second overall pick like Durant there is Thabeet, Beasley, MKG, Turner, Derrick Williams.


Reality of drafting is that it's constant cycle of trial and errors. Teams take young players, give them time, most of them fail, they try new guys and cycle keeps going.


https://threesandlayups.com/2019/05/15/how-likely-is-each-draft-pick-to-someday-make-an-all-star-team/

article goes in depth how drafting allstar is more luck than anything else. Also this odds are much worst if you know what "drafting allstar means". It means drafting player who at some point made single allstar apperance. There is army of average players who did it, but who are not really stars let alone superstars. Tyson Chandler, who was complete bust for first 10 years of his career, as former 2# pick also inflates " allstar in high lottery" . Over a years guys like Korver, Horford,Wally Szczerbiak. Noah, Hibbert...


From the very article you cite...

No. 1 pick 64% likely to be an all-star.

Top 5 pick 30% likely to be an all-star.

First rounder outside the lotto 8% likely.

Tanking may not work as well as you want it to work overall, but the numbers are what they are.

The higher you draft, the more likely you are to find all-star talent.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2051 » by zaymon » Mon Nov 9, 2020 3:34 pm

Knightro wrote:
pepe1991 wrote:
MagicMatic wrote:Pepe makes it sound like players didn’t get into the nba via draft.


Yes, because that's for a young player only way how he can even get to nba.
But there is difference between using lottery as only path toward "saving" team and adding talent, and using nba draft as pool where you can add valuable, or in some cases superstar -type players.

For every first overall pick Lebron and Anthony Davis there is Bennett, Bargnani, Wiggins, Bogut, Kenyon Martin.
For every second overall pick like Durant there is Thabeet, Beasley, MKG, Turner, Derrick Williams.


Reality of drafting is that it's constant cycle of trial and errors. Teams take young players, give them time, most of them fail, they try new guys and cycle keeps going.


https://threesandlayups.com/2019/05/15/how-likely-is-each-draft-pick-to-someday-make-an-all-star-team/

article goes in depth how drafting allstar is more luck than anything else. Also this odds are much worst if you know what "drafting allstar means". It means drafting player who at some point made single allstar apperance. There is army of average players who did it, but who are not really stars let alone superstars. Tyson Chandler, who was complete bust for first 10 years of his career, as former 2# pick also inflates " allstar in high lottery" . Over a years guys like Korver, Horford,Wally Szczerbiak. Noah, Hibbert...


From the very article you cite...

No. 1 pick 64% likely to be an all-star.

Top 5 pick 30% likely to be an all-star.

First rounder outside the lotto 8% likely.

Tanking may not work as well as you want it to work overall, but the numbers are what they are.

The higher you draft, the more likely you are to find all-star talent.


You are right and wrong at the same time. Yes all-stars are more likely to be drafted at the top of the draft, but what really matters is drafting superstars and those are unpredictable.
This year 6/15 all-nba players were taken outside lottery.
Last year 4/5 1st team all-nba outside top5.
For the last 20 years only one championship team was built around top 5 player they drafter. San Antonio Spurs. There is one catch, they never had to really tank.
My money is on Banchero going number 1 !
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2052 » by The Effect » Mon Nov 9, 2020 4:00 pm

Skin wrote:
Blue_and_Whte wrote:You're going to see me peddle Vassell a lot since I've decided he's our guy. 6'10 wing span, Good 3pt shooter, high defensive IQ/great defensive reflexes, I project a little better than just a 3&D guy. Seems like a WeHam guy to me.

I have him #2 after Edwards, but I'm crazy like that. I think I see shades of a young T-Mac. High ceiling, high floor. Similar body movement style. Now does he have the will to be great?


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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2053 » by The Effect » Mon Nov 9, 2020 4:03 pm

pepe1991 wrote:Vassell- i can already see espn breaking news " Devin Vassell is hiring XY to teach him how to shoot".

What annoys me the most is Vassell. How do guys like him, Lonzo, Lamelo get to their 20s without single coach telling them YOU CAN'T SHOOT LIKE THAT.
What a **** is that jumper? Throwing stone ?

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Devin Vassell looks to have completely changed his jumpshot a month before the draft. This is form is not what made him a top ten pick

This^

Except im more annoyed by his inability to create for himself or others. Go back and watch his one on one game, its BAD, and honestly kinda hard to watch at times.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2054 » by Xatticus » Mon Nov 9, 2020 5:05 pm

zaymon wrote:
Knightro wrote:
pepe1991 wrote:
Yes, because that's for a young player only way how he can even get to nba.
But there is difference between using lottery as only path toward "saving" team and adding talent, and using nba draft as pool where you can add valuable, or in some cases superstar -type players.

For every first overall pick Lebron and Anthony Davis there is Bennett, Bargnani, Wiggins, Bogut, Kenyon Martin.
For every second overall pick like Durant there is Thabeet, Beasley, MKG, Turner, Derrick Williams.


Reality of drafting is that it's constant cycle of trial and errors. Teams take young players, give them time, most of them fail, they try new guys and cycle keeps going.


https://threesandlayups.com/2019/05/15/how-likely-is-each-draft-pick-to-someday-make-an-all-star-team/

article goes in depth how drafting allstar is more luck than anything else. Also this odds are much worst if you know what "drafting allstar means". It means drafting player who at some point made single allstar apperance. There is army of average players who did it, but who are not really stars let alone superstars. Tyson Chandler, who was complete bust for first 10 years of his career, as former 2# pick also inflates " allstar in high lottery" . Over a years guys like Korver, Horford,Wally Szczerbiak. Noah, Hibbert...


From the very article you cite...

No. 1 pick 64% likely to be an all-star.

Top 5 pick 30% likely to be an all-star.

First rounder outside the lotto 8% likely.

Tanking may not work as well as you want it to work overall, but the numbers are what they are.

The higher you draft, the more likely you are to find all-star talent.


You are right and wrong at the same time. Yes all-stars are more likely to be drafted at the top of the draft, but what really matters is drafting superstars and those are unpredictable.
This year 6/15 all-nba players were taken outside lottery.
Last year 4/5 1st team all-nba outside top5.
For the last 20 years only one championship team was built around top 5 player they drafter. San Antonio Spurs. There is one catch, they never had to really tank.


So, you are saying... lottery picks account for less than 25% of all picks, yet they yielded 60% of the All-NBA selections?

I just don't know why we keep having this conversation. There is obviously more value in picking higher. It's like pointing at one fat guy with a hot wife and arguing that there is no benefit to working out. The only question is whether you do more harm to your organization by taking actions to improve the value of your picks. That's a very reasonable conversation to have. The way that conversation plays out is going to vary from organization to organization. I think it's difficult to put forth a compelling argument against increasing your chances of drafting a franchise-altering talent when you are in the position that this organization is in.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2055 » by pepe1991 » Mon Nov 9, 2020 5:13 pm

Knightro wrote:
pepe1991 wrote:
MagicMatic wrote:Pepe makes it sound like players didn’t get into the nba via draft.


Yes, because that's for a young player only way how he can even get to nba.
But there is difference between using lottery as only path toward "saving" team and adding talent, and using nba draft as pool where you can add valuable, or in some cases superstar -type players.

For every first overall pick Lebron and Anthony Davis there is Bennett, Bargnani, Wiggins, Bogut, Kenyon Martin.
For every second overall pick like Durant there is Thabeet, Beasley, MKG, Turner, Derrick Williams.


Reality of drafting is that it's constant cycle of trial and errors. Teams take young players, give them time, most of them fail, they try new guys and cycle keeps going.


https://threesandlayups.com/2019/05/15/how-likely-is-each-draft-pick-to-someday-make-an-all-star-team/

article goes in depth how drafting allstar is more luck than anything else. Also this odds are much worst if you know what "drafting allstar means". It means drafting player who at some point made single allstar apperance. There is army of average players who did it, but who are not really stars let alone superstars. Tyson Chandler, who was complete bust for first 10 years of his career, as former 2# pick also inflates " allstar in high lottery" . Over a years guys like Korver, Horford,Wally Szczerbiak. Noah, Hibbert...


From the very article you cite...

No. 1 pick 64% likely to be an all-star.

Top 5 pick 30% likely to be an all-star.

First rounder outside the lotto 8% likely.

Tanking may not work as well as you want it to work overall, but the numbers are what they are.

The higher you draft, the more likely you are to find all-star talent.



That's why i said that it's IMPOSSIBLE TO PLOT YOUR WAY TO 1# PICK because it's based lottery luck and in same time 4th picks only have 35% chance to turn in allstars.
Also i pointed out what allstar in article means. IT does NOT mean transending star, it means player who played at lest ONE ALLSTAR GAME.
So guy like Tyson Chandler, who was complete BUST as 2# pick, still fits this category of "allstar" despite not being anything close to a star player, especially for a team that drafted him.
This list also includes guys like Kenyon Martin, former 1# pick who is career 12 ppg player but had one allstar game and still fits this fundamentally flawed, but telling list.

Further more , Yao Ming was allstar in every year he played because how allstars are being named. China voted ment he always was voted in, even in year when he averaged 13 ppg he was allstar- starter. Even more currupting 64% first overall pick- allstar chance.

If you play with google and find some articles about probability of drafting Hall of fame player in lottery, things get dicey. On sameple size of 1950- 1995 , this are results:
Image

Now let's see, in co-relation with tanking ( before drafting reform, so now is actually harder, but let's give it benefit of a doubt)
what is probablity to draft player AND win championship with him.

Image

And this is main issue with on-nose tanking. IT has such a low sucess rate to the point where doing almost no reubilding, historiclly, gets you same chance of winning championship as doing complete rebuilding does. If i want to nitpick, i would say doing full rebuild is by far most unsuccessful strategy any GM can implement.

As far as " evaluation of talent takes years" according to half of the board there is something very interesting, that goes against what most people here belive

According to Alexander C. Greene, who did 86 pages long study on matemathics and statictics on topic "The Success of NBA Draft Picks: Can College Careers Predict NBA Winners? " he comes across this conclusion:

The ability to predict the rest of a player’s career based on their rookie season statistics
has been proven by this study. Variables such as draft position, games, and personal fouls are
significant across all three analyses. Draft position had been shown to be significant in
predicting playing time in previous studies, and we have also shown that it is effective in
predicting productivity on the court as well. It can be argued that games and personal fouls are
closely tied, since a player who is playing more games will accumulate more personal fouls,
just by being out on the court.
Rookie PER is also tied closely with Career PER, indicating that you can fairly well
determine a player’s performance for his career after one season
.



Once again, there is HUGE difference between Tyson Chandler being allstar as 2# pick and Kevin Durant being allstar ,also being former 2# pick. Or Kenyon Martin and Lebron James.
To play in reverse logic, why Magic need to rebuild if they already have their allstar Vučević? He is allstar! ::lol:
Same goes to flawed logic most of allstars are lottery picks. No ****, 14 out of 30 first round picks are actually lottery picks. Half of second round picks don't even play more than 2 nba seasons. Almost 10 players drafted in second round every year play less than 15 nba games in their careers. Witch means lottery picks make over 1/3 of all players signed in new nba season every year.
You can't even enter nba without being drafted. Have to be undrafted first. Than signed.
It's laughable to even entertain this stupidity. This does not even take in account difference in opportunities between lottery selected players and non lottery picks mostly due level of investment in that pick.

HOWEVER, chances of drafting TOP 15 player AND being competitive during his best years are soooo damn slim.

And all this still does not make one thing factual- 2020 draft sucks. That's why top 2 picks are being shopped around. Without that fact we would not even be in this debate.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2056 » by Knightro » Mon Nov 9, 2020 5:26 pm

zaymon wrote:You are right and wrong at the same time. Yes all-stars are more likely to be drafted at the top of the draft, but what really matters is drafting superstars and those are unpredictable.
This year 6/15 all-nba players were taken outside lottery.
Last year 4/5 1st team all-nba outside top5.
For the last 20 years only one championship team was built around top 5 player they drafter. San Antonio Spurs. There is one catch, they never had to really tank.


But you have to consider there are only 14 lottery picks (23% of the total sample) compared to 46 non-lottery picks (77% of the total sample) per year.

So to your point... 60% of our most recent crop of All-NBA players were taken in the lottery, but that came from a significantly smaller pool of candidates than the non-lottery pick sample.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2057 » by pepe1991 » Mon Nov 9, 2020 5:40 pm

Knightro wrote:
zaymon wrote:You are right and wrong at the same time. Yes all-stars are more likely to be drafted at the top of the draft, but what really matters is drafting superstars and those are unpredictable.
This year 6/15 all-nba players were taken outside lottery.
Last year 4/5 1st team all-nba outside top5.
For the last 20 years only one championship team was built around top 5 player they drafter. San Antonio Spurs. There is one catch, they never had to really tank.


But you have to consider there are only 14 lottery picks (23% of the total sample) compared to 46 non-lottery picks (77% of the total sample) per year.

So to your point... 60% of our most recent crop of All-NBA players were taken in the lottery, but that came from a significantly smaller pool of candidates than the non-lottery pick sample.



This is bull**** mathematics at it's finest.
I took 2013 draft, 60 drafted players, 9 of them didn't even signed nba contracts, 11 of them didn't play single game in nba OR they played less than 50 games.

So lottery picks made 35% of all players that even played in nba that year.

This does not even take in account guys who didn't even get fair nba chance like Glen Rice Jr who "lasted" 2 years and collected amazing total of 16 games played ( who i didn't include in upper > 50 games in career squad)

So in reality, lottery picks made around 40% of all rookies that year.

And this is not me cherrypicking 2013 to make a point, look at 2016,2017 or any other year and see how many of them never played.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2058 » by Knightro » Mon Nov 9, 2020 6:38 pm

pepe1991 wrote:This is bull**** mathematics at it's finest.
I took 2013 draft, 60 drafted players, 9 of them didn't even signed nba contracts, 11 of them didn't play single game in nba OR they played less than 50 games.

So lottery picks made 35% of all players that even played in nba that year.

This does not even take in account guys who didn't even get fair nba chance like Glen Rice Jr who "lasted" 2 years and collected amazing total of 16 games played ( who i didn't include in upper > 50 games in career squad)

So in reality, lottery picks made around 40% of all rookies that year.

And this is not me cherrypicking 2013 to make a point, look at 2016,2017 or any other year and see how many of them never played.


You do realize that pointing out a huge chunk of non-lotto draft picks are so bad that they never even play a season's worth of games before they're let go actually *helps* my point and not hurts it, right?
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2059 » by VFX » Mon Nov 9, 2020 8:24 pm

So what you are arguing is that the draft is a gamble.

No ****. Drafting a starting level player, or a player that translates extremely well to the nba, is why people are very well paid to make that determination. It’s not an exact science.

However, there is also a reason why most high ranked prospects, with actual basketball skill, are deserving of their ranking.

Some teams decide to take risks on Dwight Howard and Anthony Bennet. Nothing is a sure thing.

There is absolutely nothing you can say that would convince me that the draft isn’t the best way for Orlando, in its current state, to find a superstar. You can try, but it’ll never happen.
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Re: Official 2020 NBA Draft Thread 

Post#2060 » by MagicFan101 » Mon Nov 9, 2020 8:39 pm

I don’t think Pepe understands how rare players like Lebron and Durant are or even how rare an All-NBA star like Damian Lilliard (#6 pick) are.

Hitting on such talents more than 60% of the time with the #1 pick is pretty remarkable. Yes, that does mean you will have some Anthony Bennett’s in the mix — but more like the role players like Bogut and Bargnani or Martin.

You have very high paid professional scouts and are saying the odds are ~60/40 in your favor in a typical year ... you always take those odds unless someone is trading an established star for the pick.

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