FarBeyondDriven wrote:Mobley was considered an elite prospect along with Cade and Green. The best center prospect since KAT. This draft class overall was highly regarded and considered great mostly because it had multiple supposed elite prospects at the top. I think Mobley hasn't reached his peak yet but he's close. I don't think he's an elite player yet (a shade below) so I don't view him as quite having lived up to his pre-draft hype. There's still a chance he will though and I don't think the Cavs would be terribly disappointed if this is all they get.
What I do find odd is last year we got a carbon copy of Mobley in Alex Sarr yet despite almost identical size/length/athleticism/skill he wasn't considered a great prospect let alone elite, like Mobley and as a result, without any supposed elite or great prospects the 2024 class was/is deemed weak.
Age 20 seasons
Mobley - 15/8/3 shooting 25% from three with 2.5 stocks per game
Sarr - 19/9/3 shooting 35% from three with nearly 3 stocks per game
I think we have an epidemic of poor talent evaluators in here
I don't know, maybe Sarr's stats might be sort of empty given that Washington is literally the worst defensive team in the league and could be one of the worst teams of all time.
Mobley elevated the 25th ranked defense to the 7th in his first year and 1st in his second year. Mobley joined a cellar-dweller and got them above .500 his first year, while Sarr's team was bad last year and may be among the worst teams of all time this year when it's all said and done.
You're also comparing Sarr's second year to Mobley's first and hiding it behind "age 20 seasons". Mobley stepped onto the court in the NBA and belonged, Sarr needed a year of effing around to figure things out enough to not be straight-out bad.
Yes, Sarr, might end up similar to or better than Mobley. He was a top pick in the draft and might've been the #1 pick if he didn't turn down a workout with Atlanta. He's made huge growth from bad on a bad team to good on a bad team. The fact his team is bad might help him develop faster, while Mobley (and the Mitchell trade) put the Cavs into playoff mode earlier than Mobley's development timeline might have preferred.