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Following potential 2015 draftees

Let's say bargnani could pass, wasn't a *****, and was drafted 12th... Is he a bust? I also don't think he's a smart player... Frank is.


Everyone should listen to this podcast with David Locke and David James starting at 12:50. Just fast forward to the part where he's talking about Kaminsky as the riskiest pick in the draft...

https://weareutahjazz.com/lockedonjazz/
 
Nutshell on the Locke podcast:

- Dennis Lindsey apparently said (paraphrase) that the 4-year senior who didn't dominate when he was 18, 19 or 20 is riskier than the 19 year-old elite athlete you don't know much about. Didn't mention Kaminsky by name, specifically.

- Locke points to other examples: Wesley Johnson, Ekpe Udoh, Jimmer Fredette

- Locke says that DL has two of the biggest draft home runs of the past 5 years: Rudy Gobert and Kawhi Leonard. He says the common denominator is elite measurables, athleticism, inner desire to be great and raw/underdeveloped skills. DL sees the Jazz having an advantage in player development. DL's worst pick so far is Trey Burke--college POTY with developed skills, but lacking measurables and athleticism.

This leads me to believe the Jazz will draft someone young, athletic, long and raw, but with strong desire---e.g., Turner, Oubre, Looney, maybe Portis.

David Locke thinks Hollis-Jefferson might also fit the profile.
 
Everyone should listen to this podcast with David Locke and David James starting at 12:50. Just fast forward to the part where he's talking about Kaminsky as the riskiest pick in the draft...

https://weareutahjazz.com/lockedonjazz/

Locke has admitted he has not watched any college basketball this year, so he probably has no idea Kaminsky dominated the likes of WCS, Towns, Okafor, etc.
He is going by the numbers that 4 year players usually bust. And he was wrong about Frank sucking his first two years, Frank was good in limited minutes his sophomore year (25.8 PER)
 
Locke has admitted he has not watched any college basketball this year, so he probably has no idea Kaminsky dominated the likes of WCS, Towns, Okafor, etc.
He is going by the numbers that 4 year players usually bust. And he was wrong about Frank sucking his first two years, Frank was good in limited minutes his sophomore year (25.8 PER)

True, but Locke is predominantly referring to Dennis Lindsey's comments...
 
We need to draft big. Gotta have something other than Gobert, Favors, and Book on that frontline
Remember that the draft is not the only way to acquire players
 
I trust the opinions of a lot of posters on this board more than Locke's, especially when talking about college players. Also, when talking about DL's best picks so far, Rudy was a fantastic pick, but Leonard was an easy call. He was the BPA available, and I know a lot of us were a little miffed Utah took Burks over him. Also, you have to be careful not to overreact after picking someone like Trey. Just because he didn't work out, doesn't mean Kaminsky won't just because they had one thing in common. Utah has done that before after drafting Stevenson. After Deshawn didn't quite workout like they hoped, they steered away from young questionable players, which caused them to pick Humphries and Snyder over Jefferson and Smith. If Kaminsky is still on the board and Utah passes, it better be because they believe in the guy they go after, not because they're still smarting from the Trey incident.
 
True, but Locke is predominantly referring to Dennis Lindsey's comments...

Who is just one voice in the process. I'm sure Perrin, KOC, Snyder, and other scouts opinions matter a great deal to him.
Even though he did draft Leonard and Gobert, these were value, no brainer picks at the spot. He did not reach to get any of them.
So I'm not sure we've seen enough to pinpoint his drafting style as always athletic and long.
 
Nutshell on the Locke podcast:

- Dennis Lindsey apparently said (paraphrase) that the 4-year senior who didn't dominate when he was 18, 19 or 20 is riskier than the 19 year-old elite athlete you don't know much about. Didn't mention Kaminsky by name, specifically.

- Locke points to other examples: Wesley Johnson, Ekpe Udoh, Jimmer Fredette

- Locke says that DL has two of the biggest draft home runs of the past 5 years: Rudy Gobert and Kawhi Leonard. He says the common denominator is elite measurables, athleticism, inner desire to be great and raw/underdeveloped skills. DL sees the Jazz having an advantage in player development. DL's worst pick so far is Trey Burke--college POTY with developed skills, but lacking measurables and athleticism.

This leads me to believe the Jazz will draft someone young, athletic, long and raw, but with strong desire---e.g., Turner, Oubre, Looney, maybe Portis.

David Locke thinks Hollis-Jefferson might also fit the profile.

Agreed. Looney and Oubre fit the bill. Maybe Booker, too. He isn't abnormally long or athletic, but he's passable in that regard, produced as a freshman, is the youngest player in the draft (iirc) and brings elite shooting to the table, which we desperately need.
 
Myles Turner is looking good...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HV6jwAbXYzQ


His running seems massively improved. There was a great article on DX about the science of running and they used him as an example. I've kind of fallen in love with him as a prospect with time, after being really low on him for most of the year. Would absolutely love it if we can draft him.
 
And he was wrong about Frank sucking his first two years, Frank was good in limited minutes his sophomore year (25.8 PER)

Why didn't Frank play more minutes? Why were his minutes limited?

I think that's the point Locke is making. Frank wasn't playing at such a level that he was forced to play heavy minutes as a freshman or sophomore in college. Then in his junior year he started getting heavy minutes. At that point he had 2 years learning the system and he was one of the older players in the conference.

I'm not saying Locke is right but when your come back is that his PER was good in limited minutes you sound completely defeated IMO.
 
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