fishercob wrote:Which of Towns, Okafor, Winslow, Mudiay, and Russell has the highest bust potential?
So, not to be pedantic or anything, but I do think the answer depends on what you have in mind when you say "bust". If "bust" includes "mildly disappointing relative to draft position but still a functional player" (think MKG, Tristan Thompson, OJ Mayo), then Winslow might be the guy. I think he'll be an effective player, but may be one that doesn't live up to the expectations that tend to come with being a Top 5 pick.
But if you're talking "bust" on the Anthony Bennett, Hasheem Tahbeet, Thomas Robinson level (there I did it again...) - then I don't think any of them are at all likely to fall into that category. I'd probably pick Mudiay, but only on the thinnest of reasons - in that I still have some lingering questions about maturity, etc. when he decided he'd rather play in China than at SMU. (I'm sure others will offer more background to the decision, and I hold this judgement very lightly.) Since Brandon Jennings is really the only other top prospect to take this route and has not exactly set the world on fire, the precedent is not a good one.
Towns will be very solid - excellent defender and an improving offensive game. I'd take him #1 by a hair over Okafor. Okafor will be a prolific scorer in the NBA, but won't have the same immense size advantage he did in most of his college games. His weaker defense is what would cause me to drop him behind Towns and could lead to a mild disappointment over the course of his career. And I expect Russell to have an impact at least that of Beal, Oladipo, and other SGs picked in the top 5 in recent drafts.
And with all that said - as much as I'd love to get one of those guys on the Wiz, I am much happier watching Paul Pierce & our young guys rip the hearts out of the Eastern Conference, just hope they can keep it up!
"A society that puts equality - in the sense of equality of outcome - ahead of freedom will end up with neither equality nor freedom. The use of force to achieve equality will destroy freedom" Milton Friedman, Free to Choose