I think SMU got screwed by the NCAA tournament committee. They deserved to be in the tournament. Oklahoma St. made it in, which surprised me. They had a poor record, and they got eliminated from their conference championship right at the beginning. The only thing I can think of that might have saved them was their schedule. They did play a tough schedule. Problem is, they lost a lot of the games on that tough schedule. However, I'm glad Oklahoma St. made it. I get a at least one more chance to watch Smart in action when it matters. Maybe he can still win me over.
I spent the week-end watching four Syracuse games back to back. Ennis is going to be a solid, but unspectacular PG. He has good court vision, and gets the ball into play quickly. He almost always makes the right pass, and makes it look simple to do. I think that's why some aren't that impressed with him. I think defensively, he's going to struggle. How much I don't know. But he gets beat off the dribble fairly easily. He's just an average athlete, and as good as his instincts are offensively, they appear to be equally as bad defensively. He just seems to be instinctively a step slow. Perhaps on a team that plays good team defense, he'd be OK. His outside shot isn't as bad as Smarts, but he's inconsistent with it. His form doesn't look that bad, so it looks fixable. I'd still take him over Smart, but to be honest, I don't want either of them.
I might add, that some of the same defensive opinions were said about other NBA players before they entered the NBA. How many of you would want Klay Thompson on their team. Well here's a quote from draftexpress.
"Thompson's effort level on the defensive end has improved during his time in college, and he shows solid awareness and makes good rotations off the ball, but his lack of quickness is certainly something that can be exploited. His problems can be hid somewhat on good defensive teams, and his apparent effort level and capacity for playing good team defense will certainly be useful, though he'd have a lot of work to do to even become an average NBA defender overall.
Thompson's defensive problems should be equally pronounced at either the shooting guard or small forward positions, and the questions for teams will be how much can they coach him up and whether his offensive strengths do enough to outweigh his defensive shortcomings. His progress as a junior and strong season overall definitely quell those concerns, at least somewhat.
With his highly developed perimeter skill set and feel for the game, Thompson could contribute early in his career, and probably doesn't have a significant upside beyond what he is now due to his physical limitations. There's no guarantee he seamlessly makes the role to being a lesser scoring option, however, and he will need to stay away from the bad habits he had earlier in his college career, something being drafted onto a winning team with strong coaching would definitely help."
From DraftExpress.com
http://www.draftexpress.com#ixzz2wFRHMYE5
http://www.draftexpress.com
I could post similar concerns about Stephen Curry, although Curry wasn't a bad defender in college. A lot is based on a players athletic ability. While having good or great athletic ability is certainly a plus, there are very good defenders that only have average NBA athletic ability. I think its important to distinguish between NBA average, and just plain average. What they do have is great instincts, high BBIQ, and they spend a lot of time doing their homework. Defense is hard work, but just putting out the effort alone isn't enough, which watching McLemore validates.
My point is that both Curry and Thompson had question marks about their defensive abilitys, and yet both play on the same winning team, a team that's known to play good team defense. So while I think you have to take a player's defensive liabilities into consideration, I don't think it should necessarily be the deciding factor.