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Tre Johnson Will Likely be The 5th Pick

For The Record...

I've said this before, but I'll say it again a little more strongly worded:

Tre Johnson is the third best prospect in this draft class, but I would still prefer the Jazz to take someone else.

I think he’s one of the most exciting pure scoring guard prospects since Ray Allen. You don’t like the archetype?
 
This is really low effort. You didn't use ALL the vowels.
No this is just what is trending in Utah right now. I have seen a glut of Ashleighs and Bayleighs and Courtneighs and such recently. So Treigh seemed to fit for that Utah vibe.

The Courtneigh one was particularly funny when I pointed out that part of her name is what a horse says. They didn't like that. And frankly, she kind of resembles a horse, so I guess it is a good fit.
 
No this is just what is trending in Utah right now. I have seen a glut of Ashleighs and Bayleighs and Courtneighs and such recently. So Treigh seemed to fit for that Utah vibe.

The Courtneigh one was particularly funny when I pointed out that part of her name is what a horse says. They didn't like that. And frankly, she kind of resembles a horse, so I guess it is a good fit.
Now that was high effort, now can you translate? Lol
 
Locke is ADAMANT that Tre Johnson will not slip past 5, does not think he will make it to 5 either.

It's very possible that Ace is the guy who slips. The issue with Ace is that he needs to be an elite shot taker and shot maker to really have an impact. The rest of his game is pretty pedestrian. You could say the same about Tre to some extent, but the problem is Ace is that if he gets crowded, he doesn't get past guys off the dribble and shoots a fade-away instead. He doesn't have much in the way of counters. He's also not much of a passer. If he can't beat guys consistently at the NBA level, there's a chance he's underwhelming.
 
honestly not that hard to reconcile. Tre played on a Texas team with very little spacing. they lacked offensive threats and elite shooters. Tre played against clogged lanes and defenses in the toughest conference in cbb geared to stop him. it's going to be tough sledding getting to and finishing at the rim under those circumstances.

But this is true for pretty much every college player. The spacing is bad for everyone, Tre is not a unique case. Fears played against the same level of competition on a team that was also not that good. What does that make him at the next level if the expectation is that it goes up because of poor spacing in college? What about a guy like CMB who was on an actual horrific team?

Reality is that this stuff typically trends the other direction. FTr and rim rate doesn't usually go up in the pros despite the increased spacing. The guys who turned into pros who get to the FT line and rim were able to do it in college. When it does happen, it's usually because a player was limited in his college role and not because he was tasked with doing too much.
 
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It's very possible that Ace is the guy who slips. The issue with Ace is that he needs to be an elite shot taker and shot maker to really have an impact. The rest of his game is pretty pedestrian. You could say the same about Tre to some extent, but the problem is Ace is that if he gets crowded, he doesn't get past guys off the dribble and shoots a fade-away instead. He doesn't have much in the way of counters. He's also not much of a passer. If he can't beat guys consistently at the NBA level, there's a chance he's underwhelming.

This is indeed the same concern I have with Tre. Both elite shot makers, but neither gets to the hoop. I prefer Tre's shot making as he actually takes 3 pointers and consider him to be the better offensive prospect, but Ace is ahead of him for me as a total prospect.
 
I feel like Tre is being scouted wrong. Hes a better defender than people think, he’s also a really good passer and super skilled. And according to combine numbers quite a bit more athletic than people realize.

What are you basing your analysis off of? It kind of feels like you are saying stuff based off of highlights and hopes and wishes.
 
I watched a full game yesterday he was fine defensively and stayed in front of his guy all night.
Honestly that's really good to hear. What game was it, and who was he specifically guarding in the game?

Of the 6 or 7 games I watched, he was pretty good defensively in one of them (hopefully not the same one you are referring to) and one of the worst college defender I've ever seen in the other games.

But, also, LOL at saying he is being scouted wrong based off of one game when the guys putting together the scouting reports watch every game, going back to high school.
 
But this is true for pretty much every college player. The spacing is bad for everyone, Tre is not a unique case. Fears played against the same level of competition on a team that was also not that good. What does that make him at the next level if the expectation is that it goes up because of poor spacing in college? What about a guy like CMB who was on an actual horrific team?

Reality is that this stuff typically trends the other direction. FTr and rim rate doesn't usually go up in the pros despite the increased spacing. The guys who turned into pros who get to the FT line and rim were able to do it in college. When it does happen, it's usually because a player was limited in his college role and not because he was tasked with doing too much.
it's not true at the same level. start with the SEC alone (to your credit, you brought up two SEC examples - though that's where the apples to apples comparison ends) - it has the best teams and best athletes. and while spacing in general is bad in college, it is worse on a team like texas that relied so heavily on the guy in question. 20 ppg and the next highest scorer was at 12 ppg.

fears averaged 17 ppg and he had a teammate that averaged 16 ppg. defenses couldn't just key on him the way texas opponents had to with Tre. also, getting into the paint is Fears calling card - he shot 28% from three - if he doesn't beat people off the bounce we're not even talking about him right now - it's his greatest strength. apples and oranges. nobody is saying Tre is elite at beating people and getting to the rim, rather i'm offering reasons why some might be able to reconcile the idea that he has a good first step, but had trouble getting by people and into the lane.

CMB is a 3/4 who weights 250 lbs, yeah, his rim attempts are going to look different than that of a shooter. bottom line, in your answers, we're seeing you don't really want to reconcile those two things - you are looking for reasons and examples why it CAN'T be reconciled rather than accepting reasons why it perhaps can be. you brought up a fellow SEC guard whose calling card his ability to get in the lane and a 250 lb bruiser - and that's fine. i've given you reasons it can be reconciled - you don't have to agree but those reasons are there.

bottom line is that while all these guys are college basketball players, each situation, each team, each offense, each player, is unique. nuance matters. but if you don't want to see it, you won't. and i can't help you.
 
FWIW I looked this up and it's a good illustration of Tre Johnson not being the player type I like in that if he isn't shooting well he doesn't bring much else to the court:

Per Tankathon, of the guard prospects in their top 30, Tre Johnson has the second lowest rebounds per 36, second lowest assist per 36, and third lowest stocks per 36.
 
FWIW I looked this up and it's a good illustration of Tre Johnson not being the player type I like in that if he isn't shooting well he doesn't bring much else to the court:

Per Tankathon, of the guard prospects in their top 30, Tre Johnson has the second lowest rebounds per 36, second lowest assist per 36, and third lowest stocks per 36.
Nothing quite like tanking for the next iteration of Keyonte George.
 
But this is true for pretty much every college player.
IDK, I feel like the majority of college players dont play in the SEC since there are more non SEC college programs than SEC ones. Since that was one of Seattle's points in the discussion I think that the statement quoted is incorrect.
 
it's not true at the same level. start with the SEC alone (to your credit, you brought up two SEC examples - though that's where the apples to apples comparison ends) - it has the best teams and best athletes. and while spacing in general is bad in college, it is worse on a team like texas that relied so heavily on the guy in question. 20 ppg and the next highest scorer was at 12 ppg.

fears averaged 17 ppg and he had a teammate that averaged 16 ppg. defenses couldn't just key on him the way texas opponents had to with Tre. also, getting into the paint is Fears calling card - he shot 28% from three - if he doesn't beat people off the bounce we're not even talking about him right now - it's his greatest strength. apples and oranges. nobody is saying Tre is elite at beating people and getting to the rim, rather i'm offering reasons why some might be able to reconcile the idea that he has a good first step, but had trouble getting by people and into the lane.

CMB is a 3/4 who weights 250 lbs, yeah, his rim attempts are going to look different than that of a shooter. bottom line, in your answers, we're seeing you don't really want to reconcile those two things - you are looking for reasons and examples why it CAN'T be reconciled rather than accepting reasons why it perhaps can be. you brought up a fellow SEC guard whose calling card his ability to get in the lane and a 250 lb bruiser - and that's fine. i've given you reasons it can be reconciled - you don't have to agree but those reasons are there.

bottom line is that while all these guys are college basketball players, each situation, each team, each offense, each player, is unique. nuance matters. but if you don't want to see it, you won't. and i can't help you.

Well, I have a lot of disagreements with how you're looking at these two examples. I feel like a lot of those points are either irrelevant or not consequential, but there's no point in agonizing over those differences. I don't think you should need this perfect intersection of several different elements for this explanation to apply. The larger point is the one that should be addressed which is: Does improved spacing and conditions at the NBA level reliably unlock this kind of rim pressure? Historically, that hasn’t been the case. This is true across the spectrum whether it be guys who reliably applied rim pressure or guys that do not. Guys who didn't apply rim pressure still don't do that when they get to the NBA, and the guys that did apply pressure still do but less than they did in college. Despite all the things that make it difficult to attack the rim in college, it's not easier to do these things at the pro level.

That doesn’t mean it’s impossible. But “nuance” only goes so far if we can’t point to real outcomes. I’m open to being convinced, but the burden of proof is on showing this kind of leap actually happens. Examples of guys who couldn’t pressure the rim in college but suddenly did in the NBA are rare, and I haven’t seen many that really fit Tre’s profile.
 
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