Is this thread now the official "Find Out Who NAOS Is" thread?
Is this thread now the official "Find Out Who NAOS Is" thread?
What's the point of the original thread? Discussing a guy not taken by the Jazz in the later stages of the draft? This is much more entertaining.
But srsly, there's more butthurt going on in this thread than a goddamn prison-shower. Let's brighten-up, ladies.
Literacy does not.Strength does matters.
Literacy does not.
No luck. A couple candidates, but I'm not sold. I'm probably misremembering his field. Duck, PM me, and I can continue my search.
Literacy does not.
Literacy does not.
Don't make fun of his lisp.
Here's a question for Kicky. If the bench press doesn't show any importance and/or show if they player will succeed in the NBA, would you have wanted to draft Enes Kanter if he couldn't bench 185 once? Why or why not? Also, I bet 95% of All-Star caliber players can bench 185 at least 5 times. Strength does matters.
To be totally honest I wouldn't have cared. And that's because I'm pretty sure that it's not predictive of anything.
In looking at past NBA Combine results of Centers who were actually drafted those numbers are all over the map.
Tyson Chandler has one of the lowest results ever for centers (twice) and his career has generally turned out fine. The highest guy ever is Paul Miller (25 reps) I've never heard of him.
https://www.draftexpress.com/nba-pr...source=All&sort2=DESC&draft=100&pos=5&sort=14
The top bench rep centers since 2000 are Miller, Derek Character, Emeka Okafor, Al Horford and Devon Hardin. Two of those guys made it, the others didn't.
The bottom five bench rep centers sine 2000 are Marcus Douthit, Ernest Brown, Tyson Chandler, Peter Ramos, and Al Jefferson. Two of those guys made it, the
That's the story up and down those results regardless of position. If you'd ever looked (I suspect you haven't) you'd see that too. Doesn't seem to matter at all. And that doesn't even take account of the draftees that refused to even do the drill (Demarcus Cousins and Greg Oden to name a couple) presumably because it wouldn't have yielded impressive results. Dwight Howard of all people came up significantly below average in his bench press combine measurements for his position (7 reps). So yeah, I think making any decisions where that's a major factor is foolish. I would have evaluated pretty much everything else first.
As for your assertion re: All-Star caliber players, that's inherently unprovable as to what they could bench today. If we look at combine results however, you're almost assuredly wrong. First of all we already know Kevin Durant had zero reps so that makes it only 23 of 24 possible in the first place and several (something like half) of the 2012 all-stars never even took the test at the combine. Andre Iguodala failed your benchmark as well and several previous all-stars such as Josh Howard, Caron Butler, and Rajon Rondo failed the same benchmark.
So no, I don't think your totally arbitrary number means all that much.
Chandler came out of HS, so of course his #'s are going to be low. He has bulked up considerably since then. Same with Jefferson (on a lesser extent, but most players coming out of HS are going to be weak).