A lot of people put a ton of importance on a top 5 pick. To the point that they wouldn’t trade a top 5 pick for a good player with experience. So, I thought it would be interesting to see how top 5 picks have panned out over the 10 years spanning 2000 to 2009.
I’ve divided the picks up into 3 categories. Bust/disappointment, good/very good, great. Obviously with some of the more recent picks, it’s a little too soon to tell where they’ll ultimately end up so I categorized them based on their performance thus far.
I didn’t include Griffin or Rubio because neither played last year
Busts or disappointments (a few are due to injuries, obviously)
Darko Milicic
Stromile Swift
Darius Miles
Marcus Fizer
Kwame Brown
Eddy Curry
Jay Williams
Nikoloz Tskitishvili
Shaun Livingston
Marvin Williams
Tyrus Thomas
Adam Morrison
Shelden Williams
Greg Oden
Mike Conley, Jr.
Michael Beasley
Hasheem Thabeet
Good to very good players
Mike Miller
Kenyon Martin
Jason Richardson
Tyson Chandler
Mike Dunleavy, Jr.
Drew Gooden
Emeka Okafor
Ben Gordon
Devin Harris
Raymond Felton
Andrew Bogut
LaMarcus Aldridge
Andrea Bargnani
Jeff Green
Al Horford
Kevin Love
Russell Westbrook
O. J. Mayo
James Harden
Tyreke Evans
Great players
Pau Gasol
Yao Ming
LeBron James
Chris Bosh
Dwane Wade
Carmelo Anthony
Dwight Howard
Chris Paul
Deron Williams
Kevin Durant
Derrick Rose
Out of 48 top 5 picks, that works out to...
17 Busts
21 good players
11 great players
Percentage wise that's 35% busts, 43% good/very good, 22% great.
So basically, your odds of drafting a future HOF franchise caliber player are about 2 in 10. You stand about a 75-80% chance of ending up with a bust or a player who's good but not great.
Not very good odds, are they?
That's why excluding the rare drafts where there's a LeBron, Howard, etc. I'd opt for trading a top 5 pick for a proven good player, thus eliminating the bust possibility. If the draft were a Las Vegas game, that would be the smart way to go.
I’ve divided the picks up into 3 categories. Bust/disappointment, good/very good, great. Obviously with some of the more recent picks, it’s a little too soon to tell where they’ll ultimately end up so I categorized them based on their performance thus far.
I didn’t include Griffin or Rubio because neither played last year
Busts or disappointments (a few are due to injuries, obviously)
Darko Milicic
Stromile Swift
Darius Miles
Marcus Fizer
Kwame Brown
Eddy Curry
Jay Williams
Nikoloz Tskitishvili
Shaun Livingston
Marvin Williams
Tyrus Thomas
Adam Morrison
Shelden Williams
Greg Oden
Mike Conley, Jr.
Michael Beasley
Hasheem Thabeet
Good to very good players
Mike Miller
Kenyon Martin
Jason Richardson
Tyson Chandler
Mike Dunleavy, Jr.
Drew Gooden
Emeka Okafor
Ben Gordon
Devin Harris
Raymond Felton
Andrew Bogut
LaMarcus Aldridge
Andrea Bargnani
Jeff Green
Al Horford
Kevin Love
Russell Westbrook
O. J. Mayo
James Harden
Tyreke Evans
Great players
Pau Gasol
Yao Ming
LeBron James
Chris Bosh
Dwane Wade
Carmelo Anthony
Dwight Howard
Chris Paul
Deron Williams
Kevin Durant
Derrick Rose
Out of 48 top 5 picks, that works out to...
17 Busts
21 good players
11 great players
Percentage wise that's 35% busts, 43% good/very good, 22% great.
So basically, your odds of drafting a future HOF franchise caliber player are about 2 in 10. You stand about a 75-80% chance of ending up with a bust or a player who's good but not great.
Not very good odds, are they?
That's why excluding the rare drafts where there's a LeBron, Howard, etc. I'd opt for trading a top 5 pick for a proven good player, thus eliminating the bust possibility. If the draft were a Las Vegas game, that would be the smart way to go.