Tired a bit of looking up and and down the list of potential Kings coaches (there seems to be more very good options, than available HC jobs, so at this point I just hope Vlade manages to lure one of those), I return to our next hot topic, so I went up and down the draft boards and now I don't like anyone, who will likely be available at #8, Dunn, Hield and Murray included.
Still there are a few guys I really like, though not at #8 obviously (they are actually all mocked at the second round at the moment):
Patrick Mccaw - soph, who will be 21 at the start of the next season, listed at 6'7", 185, so on the wiry side, and as a prototype I would name similar looking players like Will Barton or Josh Richardson. His skillset looks similar as well, except at the same age it might more advanced by quite a margin after huge improvement from his freshman season:
Name--per40---pt----ast----TOs----stl
Barton---------20.4---3.3----2.4----1.6
Richardson----17.7---4.0----2.9----2.3*steal rate is an outlier as before senior season he never had a season with more than 1.4 stls per-40
McCaw---------17.5---4.6----2.4----2.9
So McCaw leads in Ast/TO and steal rates by a margin. While his 3pt percentage doesn't jump at you, he takes and makes a lot of them, even if he's just under-37% career shooter (btw up until this season Buddy Hield was .353% career 3pt-shooter). McCaw upped his FT% to .774 as a sophomore and as even more positive sign he made 40% of his two-pointers, 2/3 of which were unassisted off the dribble mid-range pull-ups and all sorts of "touch" shots closer to the basket (floaters and teardrops). Good handles for SG, and while he doesn't have the first step to blow by defenders, he is pretty good at running P&R. McCaw is currently listed as an early second-rounder everywhere, but I think, after people take a closer look at him he ends up in the twenties. Pesky defender, who clearly needs to get stronger, but moves very well, which coupled with his length and nose for the ball means that McCaw might be a neutral/maybe even positive defender as a rookie already.
Signed with an agent, so he is definitely in.
Due to large number of steals, he got this video
Chinanu Onuaku - young soph, who will only turn 20 at the start of the next season. I wrote about him previously: listed at 6'10", 245 pounds with excellent 9'2" reach. Very productive player on both ends of the floor, who made a huge jump from his freshman campaign: opportunistic scorer, who is an excellent passer (don't let huge amount of TOs fool you as the guy just hasn't got "please no more moving screens" memo), handles are below average for PF/good for a C, very strong rebounder and shot-blocker, who anchored one of the best defenses in the nation, can also step out and contest perimeter, though he's not fluid yet. I was wrong before about his shot as even though Onuaku does have touch, his 12-15-footer will need 2-3 years to get consistency. Despite pretty strong upper body he was moved from time to time by stronger opponents, so improving lower body strength would serve him good, and it would also makes his vertical explosiveness better.
Even though Onuaku got invite to NBA Combine, DX doesn't think he's staying in the draft as he hasn't signed with an agent and they don't project him very high at the moment. At the same time, if he returns, Louisville will have a lot of guys looking at those 80 PF/C minutes as they have 4 guys besides Onuaku, who will want at least 20-25 minutes, and they are all NBA prospects of different levels. In other words he is likely in the came situation like McCaw: easy to see, how someone falls in love with his physical tools/skillset and picks him in early 20s or he might drop to second round.
I'm not sure, how many guys in this draft made behind the back pass in their career, let alone before they were 20:
Dorian Finney-Smith - well, this guy is not a soph, but a senior, and is almost 23 (will be in a couple of days). He wasn't off the charts productive (18.2pts, 10.6rebs, 2.6 asts, 2.4 TOs, 1.2 stls, 1.0 blks per 40), but he doesn't have glaring weaknesses as well. DFS has some very good traits though:
- NBA-level body with 6'7", 215 pounds frame and 8'10.5" reach, not quite Durant or Giannis, but he would still be one of the longest SFs in the NBA and potentially small-ball PF
- idea of small-ball PF enhanced by his excellent out of his area rebounding: he's great at tracking boards and loose balls
- has good, though inconsistent shot: FTs were a bit shaky during his career in Florida and outside shot appeared only in last two years, but at Portsmouth Invitational DFS was very confident and finished with 6/14 (.429) 3pt and 6/6 FT shooting over the course of 3 games, and a number of those 3s were few feet behind the line.
- very good at moving off the ball: covers a lot of ground with each stride and can get up easily, so he doesn't need a lot of time to convert freebies around the basket. In fact, at Portsmouth Invitational he was catching defense napping for an easy catch and dunk 1-2 times every game, while I don't remember anyone else there doing that at all
- doesn't have handles to drive by defenders or touch to stop and go for pull-ups, but he can attack aggressive closeouts very well due to the same traits, that makes him such a good off the ball finisher
- has good mobility and length, and he gets down in a stance contesting outside, but is rather stiff, so he's not very successful at defending smaller guys. Help defense is not his strong suit either as even though he can occasionally pick up a highlight block, he's not eager to rotate.
- getting back to potential small-ball PF, he played at this position most of his college career, so he knows how to box out, but does not always remember to do it and obviously not strong enough to contest for rebounds inside. If I have to pick an NBA comparison, I would say Derrick Williams, who can actually rebound, defend SF pretty well, and move better off the ball, but is a worse ball-handler. I know, that that description is not actually Derrick Williams, since it corrects most of his weaknesses, but that's who DFS looks like to be.
At the moment DFS is projected to end up in the middle of the second round, but he can easily move up to late first/early second, if he looks as strong during NBA Combine as he did in PIT.