Post#1124 » by Kupchak9 » Wed Jul 28, 2021 10:30 am
Every year we hear the same empty platitudes, "this draft is DEEP", or "I wouldn't trade pick x for All-Star" or "this is a x man draft" or "x pick is an elite prospect at this level" and etc. Really it's just a bunch of louder fanbases propagating their hopes in a way that skew public opinion in their favor. One of the more recent threads has opened my eyes to just how significant representation is to manufacturing theoretical belief: viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2105957
In the above thread we have posters suggesting these players are equivalent to or close to the value of the #4 pick:
Brandon Ingram - a 24 year old All-Star SF, playing the hardest position to fill in the league and locked into a max contract.
Bradley Beal - a 28 year old All-Star SG, whom is one of the best scorers in the league and with 2 years left on his contract.
Domatas Sabonis - a 25 year old All-Star C, a 20/12/6/1 threat who can stretch the floor. A big built for this era.
Jamaal Murray - 24 year old, not an All-star PG, but a 20/4/5 2nd option on one of the best teams in the West.
SGA - 22 year old, not an All-star SG, just put up 23/4/6 on 50 FG% and 42 3P% just in his 3rd season. Still in his rookie contract.
Personally, I wouldn't trade any of these guys for a pick lower than 2. Why? Because the draft is always a crapshoot. There seems to be a misconception that you'll have a guaranteed star-caliber player as long as they're picked within an X range (top 3, top 5, top 7 etc).
In reality, each draft generates relatively the same number of star-caliber players every year and their ascension to that next level is not dependent on where they were picked in the draft. Just take a look at the last 10 drafts before 2020.
2010: Wall (1st), Cousins (5th), Hayward (9th), PG13 (10th)
2011: Irving (1st), Kemba (9th), Klay (11th), Kawhi (15th), Vucevic (16th)
2012: AD (1st), Beal (3rd), Lillard (6th), Draymond (35th), Middleton (39th)
2013: Oladipo (2nd), McCollum (10th), Giannis (15th), Gobert (27th)
2014: Embiid (3rd), Randle (7th), Lavine (13th), Jokic (41st)
2015: KAT (1st), D'Angelo (2nd), Porzingis (4th), Booker (13th)
2016: Simmons (1st), Ingram (2nd), Brown (3rd), Murray (7th), Sabonis (11th), Siakim (27th)
2017: Tatum (3rd), Fox (5th), Mitchell (13th), Abedayo (14th),
2018: Ayton (1st), Luka (3rd), Trae (5th), SGA (11th), MPJ (17th)
2019: Zion (1st), Morant (2nd), Herro (13th), KPJ (14th)
For the majority of these guys, there's players within 1 or 2 selections of them that did not materialize into an All-star caliber player. Which means even in the lottery, you're taking closer to a 33% chance of drafting a star player with your draft pick, regardless of where they're selected. Even with the additional appeal of having a cost-controlled rookie scale contract, I can't fathom how there's a general consensus that an early draft pick is worth as much as a guaranteed All-star in their early-mid 20s on a locked-down contract. It really only seems like it's during draft time, where there's a sudden urge to hype up draft picks to an unrealistic value. Then it all comes crashing down post-draft.
TLDR: A bird in the hand is better than 1 in the bush.