Well, to say it was his sixth season of organized basketball is somewhat of a stretch. He didn't come to the united states until 2004. He was born in Nigeria, and the only sport he played as a kid was soccer. His father is a doctor, and he wanted him to have a good education, so he sent him to live with his uncle, who was also a doctor, in, of all places. Yuba City calif. In what would have been his junior year of highschool his father enrolled him in Yuba city community college, and got him on a low level AAU team. He was 6'8" at the time. He was so confused about basketball, that the first points he scored were in his own basket by mistake. He said he had no clue what he was susposed to do, so he just followed everyone else up and down the court.
The next year he got on another, higher level AAU team, and he was now 6'11". He caught the eye of a few scouts that were interested, because of his size. So he got invited to participate in the Nike Summit games. Vanderbilt saw him there, and recruited him. They redshirted him because they knew he was far from ready to actually play in a real game. Although he couldn't play, he could practice with the team, and toward the end of his redshirt season, he was making life miserable for Olgivy in practice.
Udoh has a similar story, and so does Thabeet and Jason Hill. When you consider most college players play the game from the time they're little kids, I think his transformation is remarkable. Why you want to just discard as if its meaningless is beyond me. I have no dog in this hunt. I just give credit where credit is due. If Drummond had played well, I'd be giving him credit. One of the things that stands out with Ezeli is his size. He's just physically bigger than both Udoh and Hill, and he's more athletic than Thabeet. If you look at Thabeet's career in college, he made little progress from his first to his last. Whereas, Ezeli got better every single year. I'm not saying he's the next Akeem, but for a low first or high second round pick, he has good value.