I'm a little puzzled. You talked as if Wade shouldn't be mentioned because he wasn't considered the BPA, so you're talking about concensus (a big part of who's the BPA). But in the next breath you completely dismissed concensus.
I, for one, don't want to base anyone on consensus. Griffin is the best player becasue he's the best one I've seen outside of the NBA. Simple as that.
First of all, the 03 draft was an example of what can happen when you let good talent slip to your conference rival; it sure can come back to haunt you in a tangible way (in this case being knocked out of PO).
Second, I'm not comparing Darko to Rubio. I never saw Darko played in Europe so I won't go there. But there are several parallel with the 03 draft:
1) Like Rubio, there was a LOT of hype surrounding Darko before the draft. Again, I never saw Darko played in Europe, perhaps the hype was justified.
2) There were sure-thing like Carmelo, but for reason that never quite fully explained, almost everyone fell in love with Darko. The questions that many people wanted to know back then is similar to the question many people are asking now, "If Darko isn't a sure-fire All-Star then why don't the Piston draft Carmelo, who at worst is a borderline All-Star?"
3) American players who played with or againsted Darko all had nothing but high praise for the kid. Sports Illistrated had a full article on him, said the 7-footer is a combination of the best of both worlds - Euro skill and NBA toughness.
And lastly, I'd argue that there is no such thing as "All things being equal/comparable then draft for need." Things are never equal, I don't know of a way to compare a PF and a PG. All I can say is that if Griffin is used properly, he will have a bigger impact on a game than Rubio.
Are you saying Griffin's #1 status is due to biased consensus towards bigs and that Rubio is the BPA at #1? If that's the case, I'd say you're wrong on both account.
It has to do with the context of which it's used, there is actual BPA (the player we know was the best based on hindsight) and there is perceptual BPA which is what player is perceived to be the best talent at the time. It can all get very subjective but I was jus making the point that Wade was not the perceived BPA (which is more relevant since we're judging the Pistons on an "at the time" basis) at the time, if anything he was considered overdrafted by some, he was not considered a polished talent.
As far as letting talent go to your conference rival, you're making it more complicated than it really is. You can't stop a rival team from getting talent beyond acquiring the best talent that's available to you. If you make the obvious move and that is take the player that makes your team better the most than there is nothing to worry about, you did the most you could to improve your team, and whatever happens outside of that is outside of your control. You don't win by preventing other teams from doing things because there are too many teams to compete with and they can all make unforseeable moves that can't be stopped by you. Detroit thought they were going to get the eventual best player and a future star player, if they made any sacrifices in that pick at the time it's readiness of talent vs. Carmelo. Make no mistake though, they thought they were getting the eventual biggest impact player on the board.
Darko is an enigma in that his attitude took a complete 180 once he hit the NBA. Maybe it was the money, maybe it was Larry Brown, and maybe it was being away from home, who knows? On draft day he was a legitimate all-star big in the making. I'm not arguing that Carmelo wasn't the polished talent and the safer pick, but they had a good team and they felt they could afford to wait and take the risk on the player with the higher upside. Darko is probably a lesson in when you have a ready probable all-star available at your pick it's probably best to play it safe. The problem is Griffin isn't comparable to Carmelo, while he is a very good college player like Carmelo, Carmelo's game was far more compatible to the NBA at the time than Griffin's is.
Yeah it's hard to objectively compare talent level at two different positions, but it's hard to objectively judge talent level period. If one doesn't signficantly stand out at their respective positions over the other than it comes down to preference, whether that preference is need or what positions are more impacting on the game or as value among the league.
I think Griffin is considered consensus because he's been pegged for this draft class since the beginning of the year while Rubio has not (and it's still not a sure thing), he's probably the best player in college basketball, and more people have seen him play. When/if it comes down to Rubio being in the draft for sure then the talk will get a little more interesting, but ultimately I think Griffin will stay consensus overall pick because of the reasons I mentioned and that he's a big.
Rubio is just as good of a prospect IMO, and I prefer him because I think he has a better chance at being the tops at his position (while Griffin will probably be 2nd tier at his position), he plays a position that impacts the game more, and it's a position of need for us. Griffin is a big that is not going to impact the game defensively, he's not a low post scorer, and it's very quesitonable whether he develops into a very good shot creator. So his rebounding is his main impacting
big skill, but while rebounding gives you extra possessions, guards make those possessions worthwhile. I respect the argument of Griffin over Rubio, I'm well aware of Rubio's weaknesses but in the end I think that he's got the better chance of being the better impact player. Higher downside but I think with his IQ, ball handling, vision/passing, maturity, leadership qualities, length, height, and overall athleticism (what he lacks in first step he makes up with his great ability to change directions/speeds) will make up for lack of a J off the dribble and quickness. With Rubio I'm thinking that if his shot can get good enough where he can hit it with consistency over a pick, then he's going to be a quality player. He's probably already as good in pick and roll situations as anyone in the NBA.