Do you have a link for that? I'm very interested in the conclusions they draw. As a long-time coach, I'm not sure that I buy the ability to accurately predict that stuff. It's just not very quantifiable, and extremely subjective. I can think of numerous factors that I would believe are more indicative of future success that someone else would discount completely.Draftexpress has had a series examining the mental make-up of the guys who have beat the odds: Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler and Patrick Beverly. In the articles it makes a connection between some very important personality traits that allow them to overcome some odds.
Do you have a link for that? I'm very interested in the conclusions they draw. As a long-time coach, I'm not sure that I buy the ability to accurately predict that stuff. It's just not very quantifiable, and extremely subjective. I can think of numerous factors that I would believe are more indicative of future success that someone else would discount completely.
If someone could adequately predict mental toughness, it would be interesting to see their methodology.
I would be alright with Kaminsky at #12, but as of right now he is my 12th preference & is only that high because of the presence of Favors & Gobert. He is about as close to a sure thing offensively as there is coming out of college & his offensive repertoire is exactly what our rotation of bigs is currently lacking. Offensively, he is a perfect fit with Favors & Gobert. Defensively, he is about as close to a sure thing as there is coming out of college to be below average (at best). Luckily, we have two defensive big men who would help cover him on that end of the court. He is also limited in comparison to other potential draftees as far as room for growth. So, what it comes down to with Kaminsky is: are you okay using a #12 pick on a limited defensive player who brings rare offensive qualities (for a big), who will likely contribute more than the typical draft prospect, but is unlikely to ever develop into more than a quality third big? Personally I would, due to the skill-sets of our other 2 bigs & our apparent readiness to compete (with the right additions), but only if (in no specific order) none of Towns, Okafor, Russell, Mudiay, Hezonja, Winslow, Johnson, Porzingis, Turner, WCS, & Booker remain.
Wesley Johnson is still a role player in the NBA... Ammo had a horrible knee injury that ended his career... Evan Turner is still a rotation player in the NBA, and Jimmer suxx.
Jimmy Butler didn't do much his freshman year and was okay his sophomore year and was drafted as a 21.5 year old. Demarre Carroll went to 4 years of school and wasn't great until his Senior year. Klay Thompson led the PAC 10 in scoring as a sophomore... he averaged 19.4 points per game shooting 15.6 shots per game and committing 3.5 TO... 40.7% shooting... they went 16-15 that year.
All I am saying is if your argument starts with "he played 4 years of college basketball and only dominated for 2 of them" and never addresses his skills at all then your argument is stupid. I can say you should never draft a freshman or sophomore in the top 10 because look how that turned out for Anthony Bennett, Dion Waiters, Jonny Flynn, Michael Beasley, Greg Oden... If you hand pick the examples you use rather than looking at the entire sample you can make the data say whatever you want. There are a ton of examples of teams taking big swings on guys in the 9-14 range and them sucking badly.
I'd rather watch the guy and see what he does and think will what he does translate at the next level? I might also look at a few numbers and realize how dominant this guy was versus how dominant the other "busts" were and ask if he's different.
I'd add Oubre to that list, and possibly Looney, too.
Ooh ohh! I love this game! Well... if your argument is only that wesley johnson turned out then YOU'RE stupid!
Didnt Jimmy Butler go juco due to grades then Marquette and immediately blew up?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EIQ6OLQrxdEDraftexpress has had a series examining the mental make-up of the guys who have beat the odds: Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler and Patrick Beverly. In the articles it makes a connection between some very important personality traits that allow them to overcome some odds.
When is the last time a Trex turned out ok? Kevin Willis?
Don't know if anybody's made a Kelly Oubre/Wesley Johnson comparison yet. Maybe there's something to it. Seemed to have been regarded as similarly tooled players. Very similar size (including reach -- Oubre a bit better in wingspan, Johnson in standing reach).
Despite the general narrative, Johnson was pretty good as a freshman -- not quite as good as Oubre, but probably not as far behind as many imagine. Both had questions coming out about their motor/toughness.
Actually if Johnson had been drafted #12, we'd probably think there's nothing particularly wrong with the way his career has played out.