MemphisX wrote:Bam had a way more desirable situation than Duren has in Memphis. Even so, Duren has arguably been better than him at a younger age. Duren likely has way better physical measurements and is a better athlete.
I didn't follow NCAA basketball until this season so I have no idea how Bam looked in college. I have indeed heard that Memphis' guard situation isn't ideal and that definitely affects a big like Duren.
MemphisX wrote:Teams without rim protectors are dead in the water. No ifs ands or buts. Now add in the fact that he can be put into a switching system and should punish teams that go small. He seems to be an ok passer. Shot is not broken.
I fully agree with that, especially the rim protector part. Rim protection is vital.
MemphisX wrote:I don't know. I thought Duren was a little more limited earlier in the season. After really watching him, not only has he improved but I think he should start getting looks right after Chet/Jabari. Bam hasn't really shot 3s yet at all so i do not see that as something that is even needed. He doesn't have to provide an outside threat if he is a vertical threat like Gobert. I think his length/vertical/athleticism puts him in that Gobert potential conversation.
A 3 isn't necessary, no, but Bam does have attributes that make him a threat beyond 8 feet. He has a decent mid-range jumper and, more importantly, is an excellent passer for a big. Bam averaged more than 5 APG for two straight seasons. Having the ability to make the right reads in the short roll is vital for a PnR big. Having a decent enough handle to enable DHOs is also important for a big and to do that successfully you need to have some counters when the defenses anticipates the DHO and blows up the pass. If you don't, you stall your offense out. Bam is pretty effective in both of these which is why he's important to Miami's offense. And he still isn't what one would call a bonafide star. He is an All-Star, just not a top 25 type of guy.
Duren has showed some potential as a passer in these roles as his reads are generally good but his actual passing ability is still very raw. Maybe he gets there, maybe he won't.
MemphisX wrote:I think people are really pigeonholing Duren into an archetype that is insanely valuable in the NBA but somehow derided among draftniks.
It is just my gripe with the prevailing draft thought of dismissing the value of bigs that lack offensive versatility. For me, Duren's archetype is much more valuable to winning NBA games than Banchero.
I combined these two parts since they argue practically the same point.
I will readily admit that I am pigeonholing Duren here. He could be more than what he has showed so far as he is indeed the youngest player in the draft.
I will say, though, that I'm not really deriding the role that I have pigeonholed Duren into. I do recognize it as a very vital role. It is a role that every team needs. My only issue is that players who fulfill this role are not stars. They aren't top 25-30 guys. And since it's not a role that produces star-level players, it is also not a role that I would want to draft in the top 5 of any draft. When you're drafting in the top 5, you have to pick a player that has a chance to become a star, imo. That's my whole issue with it. You can usually find players who can fulfill that role lower in the draft. There are examples of such players in this draft as well. Yes, Duren has much more potential than the players I'm talking about (Kessler, Mark Williams, Koloko et cetera) which is why he'll go higher in the draft but I do feel that his role puts a cap in his potential.
To put it in more concise terms, there is an opportunity cost when you draft that particular role over other roles at the top of the lottery which is why a lot of people are against doing that.
And it all has to do with the NBA era we're in, by the way. It's not intrinsic. Not for me, at least. It's due to the way that the NBA is playing right now that the value of this role is depreciated. Because the NBA doesn't value that role as much as it values others good players who fulfill that role often fall lower in the draft than they should. So, if you target that role in the 2nd round, you're likely to get a steal.
From an asset management stand-point, it makes much more sense to draft a player whose projected role can lead to stardom at the top of the lottery and then target a rim runner/rim protector with your second round pick.