Cauley-Stein is my first choice after Towns as far as bigs go. What he brings to the table defensively more than over shadows any deficiencies he might have on the offensive side of the ball. Having said that, Stein is a far better offensive player today than he was his freshman year. I'm not going to make a case that he's now a great offensive player, but that he's now respectable. He has developed a 15 to 18 foot jumpshot, that if left unguarded, he's pretty consistent with. No he doesn't take it very often, but then he's on a team loaded with very good offensive players. His post game is light years ahead of where it was as a freshman. While I don't think he'll ever be looked at as an offensive weapon, I do think he'll get better. That aside, I think he's quite capable of scoring 10 or so points a game on hustle alone. There aren't many bigs in the NBA that will be able to outrun him. He's a terrific athlete. One stat that bodes well for the future is the improvement in his free throw percentage. He shot a miserable 37% from the line his freshman year, and this year he's shooting 60.5%. Still not great, but much closer to respectable.
After Stein, next on my big man list is Turner, and perhaps I should have Porzingis there. Problem is all I've seen of him is youtube stuff, which is nice, but it doesn't show him in real game time. By that I mean when you watching a player in a real game you can watch him off the ball. You can get a good idea of how he hustles, blocks out, sets picks, etc. So simply because I don't know enough about him to be fair, I have Turner, who I've seen play at least 10 times ahead of him. So take that for what its worth. I like Turner, and I think he's more than athletic enough to guard NBA PF's. Will there be some that give him trouble? Of course, but in a team concept he will be fine. My problem with Turner is that he spends too much time living on the perimeter on offense. Now that may be by design. I don't know. He's a better offensive player than Cauley-Stein and has a nice stroke on his jumper. Although he's only shooting around 30% from the three, I don't think there's any doubt he'll get better. He's a very good shotblocker, and a decent rebounder. I think he's at around 9 boards per 36.
So why not Turner over Stein? Stein is the overall better defender. Turner is a good rim protector, and can guard both Centers and PF's. Cauley-Stein can guard all five positions. His lateral quickness, anticipation, and length make it difficult for anyone to get past him on the perimeter, including quick PG's. You don't find 7 footers capable of that very often. I think Stein will go somewhere between 5 and 8, which would mean there's a chance he'll be there for us if we stay close to where we are right now. I think Turner will go somewhere between 8 and 12, so the odds of him being there are almost assured. Of course if we end up picking 9th or 10th, there may be another player we're more interested in because of his having a higher ceiling.
I forgot to add that recently Turner had a sort of break out game against Texas Tech with 25 points, 12 boards and 3 blocks. Why I liked the game was that he took 13 shots, and only 3 of them were 3pt'ers. Everything else was at the basket, or midrange. It shows how effective he can be.