Bajaden, are there any players that you think have high end (star) potential in our pick range?
Well first you have to determine what "In our range" means? Certainly anyone that would fall below the 7th pick would fall within our range, and if your the GM and you think a player thats projected to go somewhere in the 20's is going to be a star, then you go ahead and take him at 7. I know the typical line of thought, is that you should trade down and not spend that high pick on him. But if you think he's going to be a star, then why wouldn't another GM think the same thing. We don't live in a vacume.
Now that I bored you with some worthless thoughts, I'll try and take a stab. I'll go with the obvious players that I think most people would list. Walker, Fredette, Burks, Hamilton, Leonard, and Knight, if he falls that far, could all turnout to be stars. Not saying that all these guys will be stars. Maybe none of them will. But I'm fairly sure that at least one or two will be a star player, or at the very least, a borderline star player. I would have listed Singleton, but he will have to do it from the defensive side of the ball, and the road to stardom it steeper there.
But if I were to predict a player or two in the bottom of the first round that may be better than any of them, I would go with Marshon Brooks, and Josh Selby. I watched Selby play in a couple of highschool games, and I didn't see that player on the floor for Kansas this season. With his 8 or 9 game suspension to start the season, and then getting injured just as he was starting to fit in, it was almost as if he was invisible. And trust me, he's not the type of player to be invisible.
Brooks, a 6'5.5" SG, had a terrific year, but played for Providence, a school that doesn't leap to mind when you think of basketball. And while it might be easy to overlook Providence, does Syracuse, UCONN, Georgetown, Louisville, St. Johns, etc. ring any bells. Yep, Providence is in the Big East conference. So it wasn't like Brooks played in some small insignificant conference. He played against the big boys.
And all he did was score 24.6 PPG, grab 7 RPG, Block 1.2 shots a game, and chalk up 1.5 steals a game. Yeah, he played both ends of the floor. His two biggest weaknesses are lack of strength. He certainly needs to add some muscle. And his inconsistent outside shot, which isn't terrible by any means. He shot 34% from the 3 pt line this past season. But he has a terrific mid-range game and is excellent at getting to the basket. He shot an excellent 48.3% overall.
So why you ask is he so far down in the draft. Damm good question. Typically, he was said to be a poor athlete. I'm starting to think that its the default term when you can't think of anything else. Strangely enough he went to the combine and turned in a 38.5 vertical. Then he finished in the top five in the lateral agility tests, and in the top five in the sprint. What happened there?
Earlier in the year after watching him play, I said he reminded me a lot of Kobe Bryant. Not implying that he was the next Kobe. But that the way he carried himself. His attitude on the floor. His confidence, all reminded me of Kobe. I could end up being dead wrong about him. But I don't think so.