I have been looking at that pick 10 and it has me somewhat worried. Kings are stacked with SGs and I am 85% sure than Bogdanović will make his way to the NBA next season. So that means Hield, Temple, Bogdanović, Richardson.
However, I have been studying the top 10 draft picks and I suspect Monk might be the best available player there. I can certainly see him going higher but I can also see other teams passing him for prospects that are possibly equally talented but fill the position of need.
The other issue we have at 10 is that a lot of the players projected to go from 10-14 in a lot of mock drafts are PFs or Cs: Lauri Markkanen, Zach Collins, Jarrett Allen, TJ Leaf, Harry Giles, Justin Patton, John Collins (etc). If we take a look at our existing roster we have Skal Labissiere, Willie Cauley-Stein, Kosta Koufos, and Georgios Papagiannis under contract for next season. That would make drafting a center a questionable move because they are going to sit third or fourth on the depth chart. I suppose we could look at a PF like TJ Leaf or Lauri Markkanen, though neither are really projected to offer much on the defensive end.
So do we go after a small forward if our fifth pick is a PG? I've seen Justin Jackson speculated about because he is pretty polished. He can shoot the three and play defense. However, there is a question mark over his upside. Another option could be OG Anunoby, he's a pretty well rounded player that buys into the defensive end. Obviously the concern with him is his recovery from an ACL injury and the offensive side of his game needs some work, but he does have a lot of defensive potential.
If we get our SF with our fifth pick then is there a legitimate PG option at ten if Smith and Ntilikina are both off the board? I'm not sure there is. Some have speculated that Donovan Mitchell could be an option and perhaps play point guard, but his more natural position is SG like Malik Monk. So if it came down to a choice between Monk and Mitchell, I'd take Monk. So if we need to get a point guard then we might be best waiting for the second round and take a punt on one of the prospects potentially available at 34 like Jawun Evans (Oklahoma St), Frank Mason (Kansas), Monte Morris (Iowa St), Nigel William-Goss (Gonzaga), Frank Jackson (Duke), PJ Dozier (South Carolina), or Edmond Sumner (Xavier). The issue with one of these is exactly how NBA ready they are, what upside they have, and whether they would be the best choice at 34 but that could be the alternative if our point guard is not available at ten.
So to comeback to the original point about Malik Monk potentially being the guy available at ten, well, I would have no issue drafting him if we've drafted Fox/Ball or Tatum at five. Malik Monk has a lot of upside if he works hard and develops. Granted we have a lot of depth at SG but we can always try to package Malachi and/or Bogdanovic if we wanted to make a move to fill a hole at PG (if we don't get Fox or Ball at five) or SF (if we don't get Tatum at five). Having a number of talented young players is always a bonus when a team is rebuilding. The other thing to consider here is that Malik Monk has been talked about as a PG. Now I don't ever see him developing into a traditional point guard, but he could potentially be a Lou Williams or Monta Ellis like PG - i.e. a shooting guard that plays point that is a scoring player first, with average to above average passing. He could be that sixth man if we end up bringing back Collison or Lawson to start at the PG if we draft Tatum, or he could back up Fox if we go that way. It might not be an ideal scenario coming out with Fox and Monk, or Tatum and Monk, but there is no doubting Monk's talent and upside.