If it's not a smokescreen and indeed happened, I would say he looked bad dribbling the ball, failing some drills, i.e. doing everything bad, except shooting. Kid has a great stroke. No way he goes for only 55% on threes that Ford was congratulating MCW with.What does "bombed the workout" even mean in this case? Did he forget how to shoot? Can he not speak English? Did he put his shoes on backwards? What does a guy really have to do to fall 7 spots in two weeks after playing a full season's worth of games for a heavily scouted division 1 NCAA team? Supposedly Len and Bennett are moving up the draft board just as fast and they can't workout for anybody. I'm not complaining, I'd love it if McLemore fell to us, it just doesn't make a lot of sense to me. Sounds like a lot of disinformation is being thrown around as usual.
First, Muhammad will not be a bust. I have no doubt that he'll have a nice NBA career. But he may not be the player your looking for. That doesn't mean another team isn't. From his time at UCLA, this I know. He compete's very hard, and he can score the ball. Those two things alone will keep him in the NBA. Now you may be looking for a player that plays tough defense, and that can spread the floor on offense. At the moment, thats not Muhammad, but that doesn't make him a bust. Williams on the other hand, I think has tremendous bust potential. People say he's a pass first PG. Duh! He has to be, he can't shoot the ball, and his mechanics are horrible. He had a serious problem getting to the basket out of the half court set in college. Does anyone think thats going to get easier in the NBA?
Caldwell-Pope by the way has been impressing folks at his workouts. Wouldn't surprise me to see him go in the top 10. I wouldn't have said that a month ago. Don't understand the interest in Schroeder. Very few have actually seen him play. I've only seen him play once, and he was OK, but I didn't stand up and take notice. He's very quick, but so is Myck Kabongo, who I think is going to surprise people. He got a raw deal from the NCAA which robbed him of half the season at Texas. He can be had in the second round.
As for why some of these players haven't been in for a visit! Well its not that easy in a short period of time that they've had to bring in everyone they would like to see. Our new GM in an interview said he's already seen all the top players several times during the season, so its not like he doesn't know what they can do. Its also possible that more will come in this next week before the draft. One more thing about Muhammad. Coming out of highschool, he was considered the best highschool player in the nation. He may not have lived up to that reputation, but he's certainly not garbage either. It doesn't have to be, he's either great, or he's a bust. There is space in between those two.
So Bajaden, putting all personal feelings/likes/dislikes aside, who do you realistically see being taken at 7th ??
Sounds like McLemore is dropping like a rock. There is much debate on whether he's going to get his shot in the NBA and how he dissapeared in the NCAAs. So is this guy as many thought he was at the beginning of last season, or not?
I'm a big McCollum fan... just had to throw my two cents in on this one comment though-- he's not as good a 3pt shooter as Jimmer. Aside from that, agree with most everything else. I'll say this for Jimmer though... I'm expecting another big leap forward this season. He might be looking like a very solid player come the end of next year.In theory, CJ McCollum is what we wanted Jimmer to be. Combo guard who can shoot and handle the ball, play off the ball with Evans, and defend a little. He has the same if not better 3P shooting ability. Much better handle and rim attacker, a much better defender, and a much better attitude. Not that Jimmer's attitude is bad, he's a great kid, but McCollum has the mentality of an NBA player, where Jimmer just hasn't been agressive enough.
Chad Ford @chadfordinsider 1h
C.J. McCollum ranked as draft's No. 1 PG by NBA GMs & scouts in our Secret NBA Draft Big Board http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/draf...rd-reveals-debut-edition-secret-nba-big-board … (insider)
Kabongo displayed bad decision-making and can't shoot. That's recipe to not being drafted in the first round, although it seems to work for MCW. Still Kabongo's a talent that can easily become top-5 player in this draft if he pans out.
Jerrett is an interesting prospect as maybe undrafted FA to stick in NBADL to monitor his improvement(not sure he's worth occupying roster spot). He's nowhere near to being playable and probably should've stayed for three more years, not declared after freshman season. Might be historically bad rebounder among players over 6'10". Played decent defense though.
As usual, CJ McCollum killing it with the interviews.
He clearly is the most informed player in this draft. Was able to talk specifics about many players in the NBA and college. Had real answers for just about everything, and they seemed like answers that came from his own mind, not agent speak.
He's a great talker, that doesn't make him a great basketball player. I can say this with certainty though ... if we draft him he's going to talk the entire fan base on his side and then kill it in summer league. NBA is another story.
In theory, CJ McCollum is what we wanted Jimmer to be. Combo guard who can shoot and handle the ball, play off the ball with Evans, and defend a little. He has the same if not better 3P shooting ability. Much better handle and rim attacker, a much better defender, and a much better attitude. Not that Jimmer's attitude is bad, he's a great kid, but McCollum has the mentality of an NBA player, where Jimmer just hasn't been agressive enough.
If McLemore fell I'd have a hard time taking him over McCollum if we decide we want to take a guard. McCollum just seems better to me, and a MUCH better fit with Evans. That's important. McLemore could mean the end of Tyreke in Sacramento, and no pick in this draft is worth that to me.
Current top 11
Porter
Noel
Len
Oladipo
Adams
McCollum
McLemore
Bennett
MCW
Burke
Out of those players, the only guy I'd truly be upset about drafting is Bennett. I can make a case for any of those other players, and I have some I like better than others, but I hate Bennett and Cousins long term.
Adams has tremendous size, GIANT hands, excellent athleticism, and a pretty staggering NBA frame. What scares me are what the scouts say about him, that he's offensively limited, lacks fundamentals, not a great defensive rebounder, and "looks lost like the game is too fast for him," the latter of which is really of concern. If the college game is "too fast" for him, how on earth will he transition to the NBA? I understand he's a long-term project and that you can't teach size, but he sounds like another Spencer Hawes with even LESS of a game.
This being said, this is the first time in the past five or six years I'll actually feel confident that the FO has made the right decision.
If your looking for someone that can come in play right away, then you choose McCollum. He's definitely a better all around player than McLemore right now. With McLemore your betting on the future. Your betting he's going to be a star, perhaps a superstar. Whether he will of not is anyone's guess. Whats that old saying about a bird in hand? There's no doubt that in many areas, McLemore is a project. Let me put it this way. If he were in next years draft, he would probably get picked somewhere between 14 and 22. His only advantage over McCollum is that he's definitely a better athlete, and he's a little taller. He has a beautiful shooting stroke, but there's nothing wrong with McCollum's shooting. In ballhandling ability, if McCollum is a 10, then McLemore is around a 3 or a 4. when it comes to passing the ball, the edge goes to McCollum again.
McCollum can easily bring the ball up the court, but I doubt that McLemore could, under pressure. Despite having the ball in his hands a lot at Lehigh, McCollum seldom turned the ball over. McCollum has no problem creating his own shot, McLemore struggles big time creating his own shot. Actually, other than athleticism, McLemore comes closer to Fredette than McCollum does.
I think McCollum is a no-brainer if Malone/D'A/Bratz consider McCollum an NBA level PG.
He has two big question marks in my mind: Can he play NBA point? And can his game translate to NBA speed/size coming from a small school.
Again Jimmer principle.
In recent years Curry and Lillard have made that jump, making it more fashionable. But just as often you get Jimmer or Ronnie Price, in particular when the PG skills are in question.
Have said before and will say again, the perfect player next to Reke is somebody like Beno who takes fewer than 10 shots a game. And the implication of that is you want to find the player who can make the biggest impact with 10 or fewer shots. And that means the player who can make an impact with something other than shot chucking. Defend, pass, create space with spot up threes. Do we have confidence in McCollum to do any of those things but spot up? And if spot up is it...well, Jimmer principle. There are far more interesting things to do in a draft full of project and defensive bigs than go down that road again unless you are dead sure. Because its real easy to swing and miss on that style player, and then you've blown 3 straight lottery picks and killed your rebuild fro no greater reason than wrong thinking around the draft.
Have you watched McCollum play?
im a huge fan of McCollum. and i dont care if he fits the roster because i don't think our roster will stay the same
Again Jimmer principle.
In recent years Curry and Lillard have made that jump, making it more fashionable. But just as often you get Jimmer or Ronnie Price, in particular when the PG skills are in question.
Have said before and will say again, the perfect player next to Reke is somebody like Beno who takes fewer than 10 shots a game. And the implication of that is you want to find the player who can make the biggest impact with 10 or fewer shots. And that means the player who can make an impact with something other than shot chucking. Defend, pass, create space with spot up threes. Do we have confidence in McCollum to do any of those things but spot up? And if spot up is it...well, Jimmer principle. There are far more interesting things to do in a draft full of project and defensive bigs than go down that road again unless you are dead sure. Because its real easy to swing and miss on that style player, and then you've blown 3 straight lottery picks and killed your rebuild fro no greater reason than wrong thinking around the draft.
Have you watched McCollum play?
A few times in previous years, did not see any of his 12 games this season, just highlights. That too is a concern though. This is a guy who was a .440 type shooter, maybe .350 from 3pt land, then his senior year, in 12 games he shoots it great. But are those his real numbers? Or if he had played 30 games would they have settled back toward his normal production?
Not a great athlete, not a PG unless he's made into one. Decently clever scorer but not a brilliant handle, and they set a lot of picks for him. Small school scorer. Most impressive thing to me in years past was his rebounding for a smallish guard, although that probably wouldn't work as well at the next level. We've gotten burned twice taking that gamble, for no good reason in either case, on Douby and Jimmer. We once again don't have a good reason to take the chance this time unless we are dead sure. Not hopeful. Sure. Because you miss and you end up with a nearly worthless piece. Again. A 10th-12th man type at a position/description (small guard who may or may not be PGish and sure loves to chuck) where we absolutely do not need bolstering.
Again Jimmer principle.
In recent years Curry and Lillard have made that jump, making it more fashionable. But just as often you get Jimmer or Ronnie Price, in particular when the PG skills are in question.
Have said before and will say again, the perfect player next to Reke is somebody like Beno who takes fewer than 10 shots a game. And the implication of that is you want to find the player who can make the biggest impact with 10 or fewer shots. And that means the player who can make an impact with something other than shot chucking. Defend, pass, create space with spot up threes. Do we have confidence in McCollum to do any of those things but spot up? And if spot up is it...well, Jimmer principle. There are far more interesting things to do in a draft full of project and defensive bigs than go down that road again unless you are dead sure. Because its real easy to swing and miss on that style player, and then you've blown 3 straight lottery picks and killed your rebuild fro no greater reason than wrong thinking around the draft.