2014 was the first draft I blogged about, and I started this blog largely because it was so much fun to analyze that crop. Now 2021 is loaded with parallels with makes it similarly exciting to analyze.
It started with Andrew Wiggins being hyped as the next LeBron, and then massively disappointing as a college freshman while his teammate Joel Embiid looked like a mega stud out of nowhere as an exceptionally coordinated 7 footer.
But in spite of his disappointment, Wiggins still went #1 overall as his freshman performance was good enough to not wash away the shiny hype he entered the season with, and the prospect of improvement based on his elite athleticism.
Now this year, Cade Cunningham was hyped as a Luka Doncic type generational prospect, but has performed more on Wiggins’ level while Evan Mobley has been the elite, athletic 7 footer who stuffs the stat sheet. Yet Cade’s preseason hype has helped him maintain the consensus #1 overall status.
In fact, Cade’s hype has held up even stronger than than Wiggins, as at least there were genuine discussions as to whether Embiid should go #1 before his medical red flags caused him to drop to #3. In this case, Cade is still holding strong as the consensus #1 overall in spite of Mobley being completely healthy.
The Cade/Wiggins comparison has been commonly dismissed as Wiggins being an athlete who has no idea how to play, and that Cade’s passing and shooting means that he won’t fail. But that ignores the fact that Wiggins was not any worse of an NCAA player than Cade, while also being 5 months younger. Let’s look at a quick and dirty spot check of NCAA goodness with Box Score Plus/Minus
Age | BPM | |
Mobley | 19.6 | 13.7 |
Embiid | 19.8 | 11.9 |
Wiggins | 18.9 | 8.3 |
Cade | 19.3 | 8.3 |
In retrospect is is easy to reduce Wiggins to an athlete who has no clue how to play, but it just was not that apparent at the time. He had decent scoring ability offensively, averaged 17 points on solid shooting %’s, drew a ton of free throws, and was a good defensive player due to his excellent athleticism.
Now people may lament that Cade’s teammates were the worst thing since sliced bread, while Wiggins played on a perennially great Kansas team. But then when we look at their on/off splits, Wiggins is the one who made a clearly positive impact on his team. From hooplens.com:


Wiggins not only had a major impact on the defense as a long, athletic player who could defend multiple positions, but he also had a more clearly positive impact on the offense where he could at least use his athleticism to get some easy shots, crash the offensive glass, and draw a high volume of free throws. Whereas in spite of his passing, Cade’s team seemed to get more easy 2 pointers with him off the floor.
Of course this doesn’t prove that Cade will be as bad as Wiggins, as college on/off stats are very noisy and plenty of players with lower freshman BPMs have gone on to be all-stars. On average, Cade should be better than Wiggins. But it is enough information to at least start questioning what makes Cade’s floor necessarily higher than Wiggins.
The common answer would be that athleticism is overrated, and Cade’s shooting and passing is what is actually the more valuable trait. But that isn’t necessarily the case– athleticism is and always has been an incredibly valuable NBA trait. Further, OJ Mayo could shoot and pass as well as Cade and had a pedestrian NBA career. The real lesson from Wiggins should be that being well rounded with limited flaws is predictive of NBA stardom– not checking a few magical boxes regardless of the flaws that come with it.
One funny commonality is that both were arguably better as role players. Wiggins had a narrative that worst case he would be a great role player as he could make an open 3 and be a defensive stopper. But Minnesota had different plans for him to relentlessly chuck stepback jumpers from mid-range instead, and it did not amount to a good player.
There seems to be a similar notion with Cade, that worst case he can be a more athletic Joe Ingles who provides excellent 3 + D support. But Joe Ingles wouldn’t be Joe Ingles if he was drafted #1 and expected to carry the offense like Luka Doncic, because he would do very poorly in that role.
Cade may do a better job of it than Joe Ingles would, but that doesn’t mean he will necessarily be an adequate primary creator in the NBA. And if he always has the ball in his hands– how much value does his shooting *really* carry? Being able to make pullup 3’s is a helpful skill, but if he is still collectively inefficient and his shooting is not often being used to provide spacing gravity to his other teammates, it diminishes the value of it.
Maybe Cade Turns Out Better than Wiggins
But does it really matter? This kid from USC is an obvious stud and everything about him is wired for efficiency. You would think that with the advent of statistics that qualities like elite efficiency, passing, defense, in a player who is also taller, longer, and more athletic than Cade would be valued higher. But the level of analysis has gotten so basic that all that matters are checking the magical boxes of being a wing creator (doesn’t matter if you are good or bad at it as long as you tried!) and being able to shoot. Conversely being tall makes you automatically bad, even if you are capable of doing perimeter things like handle, pass, shoot, and switch onto smaller players.
It is such a basic level of analysis, it is like watching everything go backwards. At least in 2014 teams were open enough to bigs for Embiid over Wiggins to be a realistic discussion before Embiid’s injury flags mucked everything up. Now we have a stud in Mobley who isn’t even in the conversation with a clean bill of health.
It makes sense to place an additional emphasis on speed and skill over taking whatever big stiff is available to fill the middle. But this has gone overboard. Being tall always has been and always will be an incredibly useful trait for basketball. And momentum can always shift back toward bigs– for instance the coming rule changes to reduce cheap fouls on shooters adds just a bit more value back toward bigs and away from guards and wings.
And regardless, a tall guy like Mobley who can protect the rim and do perimeter things like handle, pass, and shoot are going to give you a ton of lineup flexibility.
And the #2 pick is even worse than #1
As flawed and overhyped as Wiggins was, he still fit a quality NBA mold and had enough strengths such that in his mid 20’s, he has finally become a useful NBA player. And he still has room to grow into a solidly + player, much like Rudy Gay who was his negative comp, but ended up having a better than expected second act for the Spurs.
On the other hand, Jabari Parker was the ultimate empty calories scorer, and he is so one dimensional with such bad defense that he is nothing more than a cheap flier for his 6th team in Boston as he enters his prime age.
Granted, there is no reason to believe Jalen Green will necessarily be that bad. His athletic scoring off the dribble looks quite a bit more aesthetically pleasing and should have better NBA translation than Parker’s bully ball. Perhaps he can have a career closer to his physical doppelganger Zach LaVine, who was chosen later in the 2014 lottery.
But Green is much smaller than Parker and there are so many scenarios where he is just dreadful on defense without offering much more than scoring offensively, he has a nasty downside tail and his upside is capped at the Zach LaVine/Devin Booker tier, which is not good enough to win a championship as your best player.
Booker needed MVP candidate Chris Paul, a quality big in former #1 overall pick DeAndre Ayton, and a strong cast of quality role players just to be a 2nd tier contender who was able to make the finals when every star player in their path got injured. He is a good player and contributed to the run to be sure, but you want to aim higher than a Booker best case at #2 overall, especially when it comes attached to a fair amount of bust risk.
The Rest of the Draft May Be Even Better
It would really be something to see a top 3 of 1. Cade 2. Green 3. Mobley perfectly mirror the Wiggins, Parker, Embiid top 3 of 2014. And even after that, there are some similarities.
Scottie Barnes, like Aaron Gordon is the big, toolsy wing with questionable shooting. Gordon is the more explosive athlete, but Barnes is longer with better PG skills. I would rate Barnes as the better prospect between the two based on pre-draft.
Jalen Suggs is the high IQ combo guard, similar to Marcus Smart. But he has a better first step with more offensive potential, which makes him the better pre-draft prospect than Smart.
We even have a young, tall point guard from Australia in Josh Giddey, who hopefully has a better NBA career than Dante Exum. Giddey is stylistically closer to Lonzo Ball than Exum, but is smoother with his movement as well as being the more skillful passer. He has a certain wizardry to his passing, as he not only is exceptionally high IQ with great vision, but is also highly accurate and passes like he has the ball on the string. He has limited tools and scoring which give him a wide range of future outcomes, but his passing is so outlier good for his height and youth he clearly has a nice upside tail.
Later in the lottery, we have a one dimensional mid-major shooter Corey Kispert playing the role of Doug McDermott being slotted far above where his talent level merits.
International Man of Mystery
The 2014 draft was also loaded with awesome international bigs. I ranked Jusuf Nurkic and Clint Capela 5th and 6th ahead of Parker and Wiggins, and Nikola Jokic 16th. This year there is only one elite big but he is better than all of them: Alperen Sengun.
But the trouble is that they were all true centers, whereas Sengun is more of an old school PF. Is he more of a Julius Randle, who in spite of quality box score production, does not fit the modern NBA and will turn into a pumpkin in the playoffs?
In some ways Sengun is similar to Randle, but he also offers more than 2x the steal and block rates (2.6/5.9 vs 1.0/2.6) almost 2x the assist:TOV ratio (1.11 vs 0.57), a wetter jump shot (79.4% FT vs 70.6%), and much better interior scoring (67.4% 2P vs 51.7%) on higher usage (26.7 vs 25.5). All while playing in a better league at 8 months younger.
At the time I argued that Randle is just not an interesting mold, and even if he posts good stats he may not be that useful in the NBA. And it is an interesting debate where he should rank in a re-draft. I ranked him #22, which feels too low based on his recent season in NYK. But that was after his initial team let him walk for nothing when New Orleans signed him for the mid level exception. So perhaps it was a reasonable place to rate him, as there is no clear answer.
Regardless, it’s fascinating how much the market has adjusted since then. Randle went 7th overall and was considered a reasonable or even good pick by most at the time. Now Sengun is a massively suped up version with much more perimeter qualities and hope on defense, yet he isn’t even projected to go in the lottery.
At this point it doesn’t seem that most people are critically thinking about the ways in which Sengun can provide value to a team, and are just blindly fading him based on his perceived mold.
It is completely reasonable to dock his value for having questions about how he fits into the modern NBA, but based on just the #’s he is the clear #1 pick in this draft. You are heavily shorting his mold just by dropping him out of the top 5. Dropping him out of the top 10 seems like a clear overreaction to the recent trends in the modern NBA.
Trends Don’t Last Forever
It is crazy how much has changed in the past 7 years after the Warriors built the death lineup around Steph Curry and Draymond Green, and the rest of the league started adapting to combat them. Now that the Warriors are no longer a contender, the small ball trend has continued, and may continue indefinitely.
But that doesn’t mean that the momentum cannot slightly swing back toward bigs whether it be with small rule changes such as reducing fouls on non-basketball moves. Or perhaps a new super team emerges, which causes a shift back the other way.
Imagine if Mobley and Sengun were paired together. They would be a perfect duo on defense– Sengun cleans up the glass and puts a body on stronger bigs in the post, while Mobley handles the rim protection. Offensively, you have two bigs who can handle, pass, shoot, and score inside. Sengun should be an especially good floor spacer, while Mobley can at least make an open shot.
When you have that level of creation, passing, finishing, and shooting from your two bigs, it is ridiculously easy to build a good offense. It will be especially difficult for small lineups to match up with them, even though Sengun is short for a 5 and Mobley is skinny, their passing and interior scoring could collectively provide nightmares for a team that needs to put a big wing on either one of them. As of now almost every starting lineup in the NBA would need to do this.
It may be hard to believe that a great offense can come from somewhere other than wing or guard with a great first step, but let’s bear in mind that the Nuggets won a playoff series against Portland with a monster 123.4 ORtg in spite of having a guard rotation of Austin Rivers, Facundo Campazzo, Monte Morris, and Markus Howard. Michael Porter Jr. is a great shooter but nothing close to a point forward, and Aaron Gordon is not a volume creator.
Jokic is the MVP and one of the best offensive bigs of all time, but based on pre-draft Sengun clearly has more offensive talent and Mobley arguably does too. Even without either peaking nearly as high as Jokic, you can still build a really awesome offense around those two. Sengun may give a decent bit back on defense, but if he proves adept at guarding the perimeter, it would be over for the rest of the NBA.
And if teams are forced to match up with two bigs who provide those sort of matchup issues offensively, playing two bigs may start to become more commonplace once again. And if it does not, they can destroy the rest of the league with any decent supporting guards and wings.
Summary
By far the two drafts that I have been most motivated to scout film and generate content for have been 2014 and 2021, and there is a good reason for that– because they had the biggest inefficiencies at the top.
And the source of current inefficiencies is this obsession with mold. Which matters to some extent, as I noted in my 2014 writeups on Julius Randle. But at this point it has gotten so extreme that a significant portion of the basketball world is lazily grouping players into buckets without any further analysis for what they actually do on the floor.
Even though consensus should be getting sharper 7 years later, in certain ways it may be getting duller.
This is especially the case since at least Wiggins in 2014 had a clear argument for #1 with Embiid’s injury. He was actually better than Jabari Parker. Aaron Gordon and Marcus Smart proved to be better, but they are still mere role players.
Now this year, Mobley is healthier than Embiid, Suggs has more potential than Smart, Barnes has more potential than Gordon, Giddey may be better than Exum, Sengun is drastically better than Randle, and there isn’t even a Franz Wagner super role player in the mix. So the prizes at the top all offer possibly much richer payoffs, yet Cade is even more firmly entrenched in #1 than Wiggins was. This is not an efficient market.
At this point you cannot get ahead of the curve by going all in on wing creators and all out on anybody over 6’9. The recent trends toward small ball have been so fast and furious, at this point lineups cannot plausibly trend any smaller. And even if they tread water at current levels, elite bigs are still elite and mediocre wings are still mediocre.
The NBA has been a big centered game for 60+ years. There has been a vicious correction over the past 7 years, which should stay to a significant extent. But at this point it is safe to say that the correction is over, and even after all of that elite bigs are still elite and mediocre wings are still mediocre. At this point you cannot get ahead of the curve by overvaluing wings and disregarding bigs, but you can create elite opportunities for other teams who are interested in elite basketball players.
This is a great writeup, my only suggestion is on some other posts of yours. On your Cade posts you did ignore the things he did well as if you are a lawyer presenting the case against him. You are doing scouting services, try to show the positive comparisons of him with other 3pt shooters as well as the negatives.
The biggest issue of all I have with your posts on this draft are the question marks you put on Kuminga’s age. He is from a city of over 500k people, not a rural village. No one else has brought up question marks about his age, doing so isn’t an outlier clever take. It is lazy at best, and you need more evidence before you suggest something that outlandish.
Thanks. Good point re: Cade, it has been a point floating around my mind that it doesn’t really matter since the upside comps I have for him are Tatum + Middleton who make 40% 3P and mid-high 80’s FTs, and high usage guys who aren’t Steph are almost never > 40. But I could at least note that in the writeup, maybe I will edit it in.
Kuminga isn’t a clever take at all, it’s a real concern from everybody I have talked to about it. Nobody knows his real age, and it makes a huge difference whether he is 18 or 20.
Givony + Schmitz never throw shade on a prospect’s age bc that’s not their job.
I don’t mean to come across of accusing him of definitely having a fake age, but the uncertainty alone tanks his stock quite a bit. Players from countries with unreliable documentation have fake ages all the time, and it’s not a point GM’s can comfortably ignore if they are going to roll the dice on a guy like Kuminga.
I really respect your analysis, but i think you are setting yourself up for embarrassment for your takes on Cade.
Here are many of Cades horrible assist numbers:
When you see all those missed layups you see why the stats don’t tell the whole story.
The NCAa favors small guards and bigs. Wings are a market inefficiency in the ncaa.
I agree that Mobley is equally as good as Cade, at least. I have them 1A/1B.
I don’t think you are accounting for how the NCAA undervalues wings. We’ve consistently seen wing players be underrated in the NCAA and then become NBA superstars. Kawhi, PG, Middleton, Tatum, Mitchell, Booker.
The NCAA is a point guard focused game that depends on Bigs to win. Wings are 3rd in the pecking order.
When you compare the team success of USC vs OKSt you have to consider that USC had a huge advantage – 2 NBA Bigs on 1 NCAA team! Way better interior finishing.
Of course theyre going to do better than OKSt which has a Wing playing point guard, with No NBA bigs!
Jayson Tatum was called “taller OJ Mayo” before he was drafted. Now he’s a top player in the NBA.
If Cade is a taller, better passing OJ Mayo, that’s an All NBA player too.
Middleton is literally leading his team in the finals as we speak.
I like your analysis statistically, but you may want to dial this take down a notch or two. On the right team, playing the right position, he will flourish.
Imagine if Wiggins/Tatums mental growth was accelerated by playing pG for 3 years in HS, then playing pg with no NBA Bigs in the NCAA – that’s Cade as a rookie.
Those missed assists videos don’t mean anything. None of those passes are great, and no team shoots 100%. You can do that for any prospect who runs the offense. If his teammates shot an average 34% from 3 instead of 31% he probably gets like an extra 0.2 assists per game, not a huge deal.
Inside the arc his teammates were above average #86 in NCAA in spite of Cade’s 46% dragging them down. And they shot 53.8% with him off the floor. They have zero issues with making a layup.
Of course there are favorable outcomes which is why I always make note of them. Sure if he hits his upside and other prospects hit their downside I will look pretty bad, but what can I do about that, the draft is random. It’s still a massive inefficiency.
Evan’s brother is not an NBA big and entering the season USC was the worse team by every computer model. I was actually hoping Mobley was bad because if so they could have sucked really hard and been awesome to bet against. Instead they were the opposite. Completely outperformed what should have been possible.
FWIW– already comped him to Kawhi, PG, Tatum, and Middleton:
https://deanondraft.com/2021/06/18/is-cade-cunningham-clearly-the-best-prospect-in-2021/
Which one of Kawhi, Middleton, PG, Tatum was playing as a point guard?
Middleton and PG had higher assist rates than Cade and definitely did not have better teammates. Kawhi had a slightly lower assist rate and better assist:TOV.
Cade’s college passing doesn’t stand out at all compared to this group.
Great read, thanks for posting. I’m looking forward to seeing which of the newer FO’s have truly sharp eyes, as this draft seems like a great chance to buy low on big time talent.
Wiggins 17.6 on PCP40
Cade 19.5 just under two points per game better but still only slightly above average
The NCAA favours PGs and bigs because that is effective basketball. The NBA is an athletic showpony league of selfish iso players – just look how Team America is faring in the tournament. They lost to Nigeria. And three times in a row to Australia…
The reason wings don’t score well on metrics is because most don’t do much of anything that impacts a scoreboard. They’re a precious commodity because it’s so rare to find a decent one.
I’d personally stick with high PCP40 3&D guys and focus on getting the best PG and feed a scoring center.
That escalated quickly.
And that is why a talented Wing that has been trained to play like a pg for 4 years (instead of playing selfish iso ball) is one of the most valuable players you can get in a draft.
Basically because he shoots 3s at 40 %. Nothing else he does is noteworthy. If for some reason you have to have a 6ft 8in PG try Gidday, he’s a year younger and 4 assists better per 40.
He’s 42 on PCP40 out of 132 and barely lottery in real life. He’s not efficient or super athletic so what is he actually good for?
Just for fun, imagine this scenario for the Raptors: Cade Mobley and Green gone in the first 3, Toronto trades 4 for 5 & 8 plus a future 1st and Orlando take Barnes based on your and others’ analyses. Toronto takes Barnes and then trades Pascal Siakam and Chris Boucher to GSW for Wiggins, the 7th & 14th. Toronto take Sengun at 7, Kai Jones at 8 (for development and then crazily, gets Franz Wagner at 14. The staring 5 for the Raptors is Lowry, Van Vleet, Wiggins, OG and Birch (good enough alone for 6th place) and then a backup 5 of Suggs, Trent Jr., Wagner, Sengun and Jones. Set up for the next 3 years!!!
Raptors are in a great spot this draft. Picking between Suggs or Barnes at #4 is a good start, and then there are so many other opportunities to make things great.
If they can hustle the Warriors for Siakam and nail 7/14 with some combination of Franz, Sengun, and Giddey, that’s a complete slam dunk
Would be pretty crazy for Magic to pay 5 and 8 to move up to 4, but I don’t see Kai as much of a prospect anyway. If that happened I would go for Franz + Sengun at 7/8, and then 14 is going to have somebody interesting out of Moody, Jalen J, Giddey, Springer, or Sharife.
Who knows who they will actually take, but it seems a lot of teams are desperate and Masai could be in a prime position to load up on quality young talent.
I don’t rate Kai either (PCP40 15.9). Doesn’t do a lot of anything apart from foul at 20.5 years old. Old enough to know better and do better.
I’d take Barnes (24.5) at 5,
Sengun (32.5) at 7,
Wagner (21.2) at 8
then at 14 either Isaiah Jackson (21.7) or Charles Bassey (23.9) if you want a 3 shooting big.
https://www.welcometoloudcity.com/2021/7/12/22574511/new-scouting-tool-pcp40-explained
Have you watched full Besiktas games? Or looked at the quality of bigs in TSL?
There are a handful of guys with NBA experience and even more with strong college records, but almost all of them are guards with a handful of wings.
For full games, I recommend watching some of their games with Anadolu. Sengun struggled mightily against Bryant Dunston, who was a decent college player at Fordham. He’s 35 and obviously strong, but he’s a lot closer to 6’4 than his listed 6’8. (He went up for a dunk off two feet in the Feb 7th game, got impressive elevation, and still wasn’t high enough to finish). He was also struggling against Sertac Sanli, who’s got more size but is a slow-footed backup.
The most impressive thing I saw from Sengun in those games was his willingness to screen and re-screen. The guy is the polar opposite of Trey Murphy – he seems to seek out contact at every opportunity.
If you can watch those full games and see a guy who deserves to be a #1 pick, then more power to you. I didn’t see the athleticism or coordination that I was expecting to see, let alone the full panoply of skills. My guess is that he abused teams that don’t have a legit big, and inflated his efficiency numbers by scoring a lot of his points on putbacks.
Sengun’s 65% eFG% was damn impressive, but it’s also in a league where Sam Dekker’s was 64%, Jan Vesely’s was 66%, and Jeremy Simmons (mediocre CofC player) was 68%.
I’ve seen all of the Anadolu games.
He has some major issues on defense. His help defense isn’t good, he is normally half a second late and a couple inches short to block the shot, he doesn’t rebound out of area, and he makes some curious decisions where it is not clear what he is thinking.
But if there is one thing he did well, it was move his feet on switches. Not always, he did get torched by Micic once. But he cut off Micic a couple of times, Larkin a couple of times, Roddy Beaubois once…and these are all NBA caliber PG’s, which says a lot for a PF. And he does have good anticipation to get in the passing lanes and create steals, which counts for something.
Definitely don’t think he should be in the #1 convo since his defense is so messy right now, but his offense is god tier and if his D turns out to be just alright he is going to be such good value anywhere outside of the top 5.
You can’t compare his eFG% to those guys, bc they were all much lower usage and didn’t take 3’s
Great analysis as always. It looks like quality Euro players are still a relative market inefficiency even as the NBA has gotten better about recognizing their value over the last several years. Curious how you would compare Sengun to Nurkic when he first came out, as I remember Nurk was someone you were very high on, even more so than Jokic in 2014.
Thanks! I would debate how well the NBA has done recognizing Euro values letting Luka slide to #3 and then reaching for Deni at #9 out of shame for sleeping on Luka. For some reason, consensus always seems to have a big problem with the lack of athleticism of the elite statistical outliers, but then is OK overlooking physical limitations for the bland prospects like Deni who project to be role players.
Nurkic was a legit center whereas Sengun is more of a PF, but Sengun is no doubt more talented.
Both guys move their feet well and rack up steals for bigs. Sengun much better passer and shooter. And even though Nurkic is bigger, he still is a much worse finisher as he doesn’t have great touch near the rim whereas Sengun is automatic once he finds space. The question is how much space can he find in the NBA when he is matched up vs a guy like Embiid, but he should at least crush wings and PF’s in the post much harder than Nurkic does vs anybody.
Sengun definitely has more upside than Nurkic. I looked at Nurkic as a quality dude back in 2014, but the main reason I ranked him higher than Capela and Jokic is bc he felt safer due to higher consensus rating.
Jokic was the highest variance of the 3, and obviously it would have been epic if I also put him above Wiggins and Parker but ranking a 2nd rounder that high would have been an unnecessary hot take that would look ridiculous if he busted. Mid-1st seemed aggressive enough.
Truthfully, I wanted to put Capela above Nurkic bc he was such an athlete, but it seemed like everybody hated him and I didn’t know if I was missing something like he had terrible off court stuff.
As much as I liked Nurkic as a quality guy, I didn’t see that much special upside, and he has become about as good as I hoped. He is a really nice player to be sure, but Sengun brings a wider range of skills to the table and has quite a bit more upside to be special.
As a point in favor of college “goodness”… Most of the college players that turned into pro superstars looked elite in college in their first 2 years.
Box Plus/Minus is a crude tool (particularly on defense), and big men in college, particularly in weaker conferences, can put up really strong numbers.
But even so, if a player is going to be an All-NBA player, he’s almost always really good in college while still young!
Here’s a spreadsheet with college BPM’s going back to 2008. I added a -2 penalty to sophomores, and -2 to 7 footers vs. 6 foot tall players.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1ppcNLFQE2hI-9HZyJDO6B_li8CQDsaBmAEuFkRytWdo/edit#gid=0
Even something so crude as this gives a pretty good idea of who the stars will be, or who has superstar potential!
Thanks for sharing the sheet. BPM is more likely to have false positives than negatives for sure, but if you disregard guys like slow bigs or mid-majors outside of Morant who was an extremely athletic guard that clearly didn’t belong mid-major, you’ll end up with some quality guys.
Guessing the best guys who weren’t in that sheet were Jaylen Brown, Jayson Tatum, and Brandon Ingram. Two of those guys landed for Brad Stevens and the other was super young and took a while to develop.
Well, if you think of BPM as generally capturing productivity (though certainly some on defense can be missed), then that makes sense. There are productive players that can’t translate the productivity the NBA… and there are much fewer unproductive players in college that become productive in the NBA.
It is logical that there are far more “false positives” than “false negatives.”
That’s a great way to look at it.
Will be interesting to see if Ziaire Williams can manage to become a guy with that disgusting 0.3 BPM with the excuse of COVID, or if he actually should be disqualified bc he was so distant from being NBA caliber.
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