9 and 20 wrote:Does there exist anywhere an actual accounting of the draft, something like an average of pts., rebounds, assists by the players at each position in the draft? So instead of pointing to individual examples of #7 picks and #15 picks, you could look at the average level of production of #7 or #15 over the past 20 years.
Not that I know of, but to give you an idea, here's the All-NBA teams last year and where guys were drafted:
A Davis (1) - Giannis (15) - Doncic (3) - Harden (3) - LeBron (1)
Jokic (41) - Leonard (15) - Lillard (6) - Paul (4) - Siakam (27)
J Butler (30) - Gobert (27) - Simmons (1) - Tatum (3) - Westbrook (4)
From this year's All-Star game:
Beal (3) - Booker (14) - Conley (4) - A Davis (1) - Durant (2) - Embiid (3) - Harden (3) - Irving (1) - Lavine (13) - Leonard (15) - Mitchell (13) - J Randle (7) - Tatum (3) - Vucevic (16) - Zion (1)
Giannis (15) - J Brown (3) - Curry (7) - Doncic (3) - P George (10) - Gobert (27) - LeBron (1) - Jokic (41) - Lillard (6) - Paul (4) - Sabonis (11) - Simmons (1)
Some things worth considering:
Utah has the best record in the league this year and their main rotation guys are: Gobert (27), O'Neale (undrafted), Bogdanovic (31), Ingles (claimed off waivers), Mitchell (13), Conley (4), and Clarkson (46th)
Miami made the Finals last year and had these rotation guys: Adebayo (14), Crowder (34), Butler (30), Robinson (undrafted), Nunn (undrafted), Olynyk (13), Herro (13), Dragic (45), Iguodala (9)
Denver's best players are Jokic (41), Murray (7), and MPJ (14)
Golden St has built a dynasty around Curry (7), Thompson (11), and Green (35)
The Clippers have built around P George (10) and K Leonard (15)
The Bucks are built around Giannis (15), Middleton (39), Lopez (10), and Holiday (17)
Toronto won a championship built around Leonard (15), Siakam (27), K Lowry (24), VanVleet (undrafted), Ibaka (24), Green (46), and Gasol (48)