TL-DR:
- Nigel Williams-Goss will be a good backup PG, maybe even a starter, if Cuz is your PG (still a junior, not guaranteed to leave early)
- Gary Clark will be Matt Barnes (PF/SF version to Matt's SF/PF) without extreme dumbness (still a junior, not guaranteed to leave early)
- Sindarius Thornwell will be a good backup SG/small-ball SF
Not sure he goes pro as he still has one more year of eligibility, but Nigel Williams-Goss from Gonzaga looks really intriguing:
- 6'3", 185 PG of one of the best offensive teams in the country, though they trail UCLA and a few others, plus their opponents defense is bad. On the other hand they blow out a lot of their opponents, so garbage time lineups get quite a chunk of time, which depresses Zag's overall efficiency.
- now, that he's no longer under the spell of junk Romar's coaching (makes you think, that Fultz might be even better than he looks right now), NWG looks very efficient, while showing good decision-making
- He takes a ton of really long 3s, so his shooting is under-represented by his .366 3p%. .865 FT% offers further evidence of his shooting touch. Looks like he worked really hard on his shooting, while sitting out the season due to transfer. NWG doesn't try contested pull-ups as his team is too good to resort to tough shoots, but he's certainly looks dangerous coming off of screens. Another huge plus: in a crowded paint he goes to an assortment of floaters and backboard shots.
- defensively his main advantage is very low stance, which allows NWG to move deceptively quickly, strength is certainly not an issue either. Gonzaga is going deep in the tourney, so he will surely get a few tough assignments along the way. NWG is only 2 boards off of the best team rebounder, though almost all of them are def. ones. Still ability/inclination to clean up def. glass is always a plus.
Gonzaga is especially strong this year, does not appear to have weaknesses, and is likely to finish the season with just 1 loss some time in March, unless they go all the way. They are likely going to lose 2 seniors and the best freshman they ever had in Collins, so both best bigs and 3 out of 4 best scorers, so it might be prudent for NWG to leave as well, since he's unlikely to improve his stock or have more team success in 17/18.
Another guy, who should go pro, but may not is Gary Clark from Cincinnati. He has same reasons for that as NWG: will be 22 by the time of the draft, and his team will lose major cogs this summer.
- it's tempting to call any extremely versatile forward, who is limited offensively as Draymond, but Green is such a unicorn, so I won't use his name here, but instead offer stronger Matt Barnes
- he's excellent to get finishes around the basket (.836% in rim attempts, to be fair, whole Cincinnati team can't miss inside as out of 10 rotation players 8 have above .700 around the basket), and from mid-range (.493 on non-rim 2s); his 3pt shot is slowly improves: he's not gonna be a threat from deep for a couple of years at least but he's getting there step-by-step.
- his main contribution offensively besides cleaning the boards and putbacks is his passing: 3.6 ass./40 minutes with 2+ A/TO ratio.
- excellent athlete PF, who lacks a bit of length, but is the best defender on top-10 defensive team in the country. Routinely ends up on perimeter defending guards.
- good offensive rebounder, but defensive numbers are hurt due to role similar to WCS.
- not being a good scorer is usually a cut-off feature, that stops people from being an effective pro, that's why no one is paying any attention to Clark, BUT: he's an excellent defender, excellent passer, can finish and shoot, makes smart decisions on the court. Guys like Haslem or Barnes were able to carve themselves careers by being smart complimentary players.
My favourite "sleeper" at this point is Sindarius Thornwell from South Carolina. Thornwell has a build similar with Oladipo: he's probably 6'4" at best, but has short neck, long arms and is very strong, so at 210 he's fine for a guard, and even some SF in 3 guard lineups. Unlike 'dipo Thornwell was the only talent on his team, so despite always being capable of things like
he was never considered a major prospect, posting dismal shooting %s in mid-30s.
This year SC got their second elite recruit in the last 10 years, plus all the major players improved enough, that SC is all of a sudden ranked and arguably the best defensive team in the country. When college seniors get huge seasons on their way out, it usually means they get much bigger offensive role and just have much better volume numbers. While Thornwell did get to use about 3 possessions more this season, his scoring jumped up by 6 points on the heels of much improved shooting (.409 3p%, .848 FT%). Thing is playing for a competitive team he massively improved his defensive stats as well: +2 reb, + 0.8 st, + 0.6 bl. Obviously he's the same guy from previous seasons, that simply got interested in playing defense to the fullest and using his athleticism on that end as well.
As for skillset:
- Thornwell's a drive first guy, relying mostly on his power, putting his opponent on the hip and bringing him to the basket, but he's also very quick in straight line drives as well. When the defender is able to slow him down, his efficiency drops massively. Thornwell doesn't have floaters/teardrops in his arsenal, and his mid-range on the move plain sucks, so he will never be a star scorer, though this would be a strange expectation for a guy, who's right now projected to go undrafted.
- shot improvement not only brought better looking form, but also much quicker release to the point, that he might do really well sticking to Rockets mantra of either 3s or inside finishes/FTs with both being equally effective weapons
- being quick, strong and long, Thornwell obviously has excellent defensive potential. When his shot is not falling - and that's becoming less of an occurrence with his set shot lately - he still has tough defense and rebounding/second chance finishes to fall back on. Plus his aggressive style of play/motor gets him to FT line very often, despite not being unstoppable slasher/scorer.
P.S Wrote this 5 days ago, but forgot to click "Post Reply", and:
- 2 days NWG went off for 33p+7r+4a+3st on 12-18 shooting, and his team needed every point to put down BYU.
- today Clark had probably the best game of his career 20(2-4 from 3)+11(4 off.)+3(0 TOs)+2bl(0 PFs) in 29 minutes in dispatching of UConn
- Thornwell missed all kinds of shots from mid-range, but still finished with 18p thanks to 4-7 3pt shooting, adding 3 off.rebounds and 3 steals
- Donovan Mittchell continued strong play with 19+3+3+4st line in a blowout
P.S.2 NWGs teammate, 7'/230 freshman Zach Collins had 14p(1-1 from 3, 5-7FTs)+8r+1bl in just 19 minutes. I would say, that right now he's the best big prospect in the country: per40 numbers are 24.5p (0.4-1.2 3pt and 7.8-10 FTs per 40)+13.3r+1.4s+3.4b. Yes, he also has almost 1/3 A/TO ration and 5.6PFs per 40, but those are passable for a young big, who can finish/get a lot of contact inside, shoot from outside and rebound/defend.
P.S.3 Caleb Swanigan does look like smaller Boogie: ground bound and not fluid, but still willing his team to the win with thumping and bumping.