payitforward wrote:Here's a question that just occurred to me -- I wonder if anyone has a take on this:
Precious is a very promising player, no question. But, isn't Isaiah Stewart also quite promising?
Both guys are coming out after their Freshman year, but Precious is an "old" Freshman at 21, while Stewart is 19 -- almost 2 full years younger than Achiuwa. Both guys played a lot & put up very good numbers for Freshman. They're both described as stellar athletes as well.
Yet, Achiuwa is routinely mocked between 9-14 (usually closer to 9), while in those same mocks Stewart usually goes somewhere in the late 20's.
I don't have an opinion about this, I'm just interested in anyone's take on why this should be so.
Isaiah Stewart has alot of potential if matched with the right trainers. He is poor and maintaining a strong hip bend for extended periods of time, and loses control of his body. He doesn't have strong feet. And he is vertically challenged. He has similar traits to Okongwu in that he plays below the rim. He does alot of pulling himself up on the rim when he dunks. His low release point will be easily challenged when he goes against defenders in the nba with length, just like Okongwu.
He doesn't have elite first step and hip bend to rely in order to blow past defenders like Achiuwa. and like Okongwu, he shows no ability to be able to shoot off the dribble against slow footed bigs and get them in foul trouble.
If you have specialist to train him for about 3 years, you might be able to develop his leaping skills, his foot strength, his hip bend stamina, his explosiveness off one foot.
He has nice frame to bang inside, looks like good length based how close his hands are to the net when jumping for rebounds. He just doesn't have explosive bounce. He is like wiseman, they need alot of load time when they jump.
They don't explode off the floor quickly kenyon martin, bam, or kevin garnett, anthony davis, --and if you have a standing reach of 9'2. you only need to having a standing vertical or 2 feet or 24 inches to be well above the rim, if you pay attention to his second jump the guy barely gets off the ground, His second quick twitch vertical is like 8 or 9 inches. Really bad.
just start paying attention to how far a guy gets off the ground and how quickly he gets off the ground on second jumps for rebounds.
When you see him jump for dunks, he has to really load hard, and when he does jump he barely gets over the rim lol. I mean, I can't dunk, but for a elite nba player that gets paid millions, this is something you need badly.
just look at 4:30 of video.
https://youtu.be/OCpKDVzWa-E?t=2703:22 Okongwu video.
His effective vertical is like 10 inches. Look at his shoot compared to the player that is guarding him socks. It's like 10 inches high.
Okongwu does not have explosive quick twitch vertical. His quick twitch vertical is like 15 inches max. An elite player when fully extended with a quick twitch vertical is unguardable, and his release is well above the rim and shooting downward.
so pay attention to quick twitch vertical. You can look at how high the players feet are on quick twitch move to get an idea of how explosive is he. the farther off the ground he gets quickly when doing a move, the higher his draft stock. I told you guys that Okongwu has heavy feet, and you can see it when he runs down the court. That quick rise, especially if you are undersized like he is, is what allows you to reliably get your shot off against length. 3:16 mark in video.
https://youtu.be/l1M1ybiTRPk?t=1961:36 jumping off one foot after a move, and hip bend.
https://youtu.be/T1iR1ncNTfM?t=96These are the topic points i would like you guys to analyze draft prospect with and maybe you might find that Jokic in europe or not over look guys like Siakam.
Build your team w/5 shooters using P. Pierce Form deeply bent hips and lower back arch at same time b4 rising into shot. Elbow never pointing to the ground! Good teams have an engine player that shoot volume (2000 full season) at 50 percent.Large Hands