WargamesX wrote:moocow007 wrote:FrozenEnvelope wrote:11th pick has some good history - SGA, Sabonis, Klay.
Yeah there's been some real good ones. The best all time probably was Knick killer Reggie Miller back in 1987. Former Knick Alan Houston was also an 11th overall pick in 1993. Another couple of shooters in JJ Reddick and Nick Anderson had nice long careers. A rugged PF in Tyrone Hill (even though he was always Oak's bitch lol). An all around wing in Bonzi Wells who was honestly underrated by a lot of people just because he was supposed to be the next great player and didn't live up to that lofty expectation. Myles Turner and Kevin Willis were also drafted 11th and both ended up being terrific starting caliber C's for their teams.Of course there's also been some serious duds at 11 but in general it's been surprisingly solid a slot to be picking in.
This made me feel a lot better about this draft. Also looking at most mocks there should be some interesting guys left on the board at #11
Idk how many years the message-board hero draftnicks have to watch the Knicks punt until they realize the cold hard truth, but:
The Knicks would have benched or otherwise stunted the development of SGA, Sabonis, Klay, and pretty much any player drafted in the 10-15 range. They would have been busts or shipped out to blossom elsewhere.
There are exactly two ways a Knick rookie makes an impact, especially with Thibs:
1) He’s a marketing hero like RJ; or
2) He immediately beats out veterans to become a better player in Year 1 than a handful of coach favorite vets with 7+ years experience.
TL; DR: The Knicks 11 pick is a total waste of time and energy. You have a better chance of being eaten by a shark while being struck by lightning than the Knicks finding the next superstar or even impact All Star at pick 11-12.
"Sell the team. Sell the team. Sell the team."