He played well when Collison was out at the beginning of the year, and watching him play I think he will do well as a PG.
As for the 6'1 comment.. Was that in re: to Westbrook? No way he's that short.. Maybe 6'2.5 w/o shoes... Can't see him as 6'1 w/o shoes tho.
Well, that's going to be the problem with this debate. With shooting, we can point to players and their increase in percentages. With ball handling, we can subjectively say a player got better, but there is no proof. Even turnovers can be more a measure of poor decision making as opposed to have the ball taken from you while dribbling.
As a side note, at the risk of freaking everyone here out, I am starting to believe that the safest and most Petrie-esque pick in this draft is Brandon Rush. He excels at shooting and D and can board and has a high basketball IQ. At a minimum he will be a NBA rotation player, but has the potential to be a slightly poorer man's Mitch Richmond.
Your right about one thing. Rush would be a safe pick. He sort of reminds me of another Brandon. Brandon Roy. He's not as good a ball handler or passer as Roy, but goes about business in the same quiet manner, doing a lot of the little things that win you games. I couldn't fault the pick, except for the fact that we already have a log jam at the 2 and the 3 positions. If we were to pick him, I think it would mean there's another deal in the works down the road.
i think Brandon Rush has bust written all over him
Why do you say that?
Rush has good height, athleticism and speed for his position. He was heralded a a very good prospect for years, but lost some luster after having a mediocre season while hurt two seasons ago. Now he comes back this year and is arguably the best player on a championship team.
Read about him on any of the draft sites and they all say his plusses are his physical attributes, defence, long range shooting and intangibles. His primary weakness is his ball handling. That may prevent him from being a top 10 pick, but there is always room in the NBA for a player with an ideal basketball body who can shoot and defend.
Your right about one thing. Rush would be a safe pick. He sort of reminds me of another Brandon. Brandon Roy. He's not as good a ball handler or passer as Roy, but goes about business in the same quiet manner, doing a lot of the little things that win you games. I couldn't fault the pick, except for the fact that we already have a log jam at the 2 and the 3 positions. If we were to pick him, I think it would mean there's another deal in the works down the road.
Rush is more like a Shane Battier at best, he'll never be much of a scorer. But he'll provide good man defense and spot up shooting.
I really don't want to get into a discussion of how good or bad Rush is, but if he's only as good as Battier, thats not so bad. But I do think he's a better scorer than Battier. I never thought that Battier had a scorers mentality, and I think that Rush does. Were probably not going to draft him anyway, so its a moot point.
As a side note, at the risk of freaking everyone here out, I am starting to believe that the safest and most Petrie-esque pick in this draft is Brandon Rush. He excels at shooting and D and can board and has a high basketball IQ. At a minimum he will be a NBA rotation player, but has the potential to be a slightly poorer man's Mitch Richmond.
You could be right. I like him a lot, and he's probably more athletic than Rush..I would rather have CDR than Rush...
Russell Westbrook height prediction:
w/o shoes: 6'1"
w/ shoes: 6'1 3/4"
Found another mock draft board predicting Westbrook at #12 with this remark about Kings woes and his talents or lack thereof.
12. Sacramento Kings, Russell Westbrook PG/SG
Ok, if I were really the GM for the Kings, I'd probably be blitzed out of my mind at The Palms and forget that draft day had even arrived. But assuming someone dragged me away from the casino or Playboy club long enough to call in my pick, it would be for the super athletic, but inconsistent shooting Westbrook. Lucky for me, my fans had six years of Mike Bibby, so they're used to a point guard hitting around 37% from 3 pt land.
Source: insomniacslounge.com
yikes.. I thought he was closer to 6'4.. Standing next to Collison he looked quite a bit bigger. I can't find a pic of them standing, but here is one sitting next to each other. Notice how he is longer from the foot to the knee, and his arms are longer as well. Collison is listed at 6'1.. I think Collison will measure at 6'0 w/o shoes, and Westbrook will be over 6'2 easy. *crosses fingers!*
It simply makes little sense for the Kings to draft PG experiment Westbrook with Garcia and Douby on their current roster. Only if the Kings think they may lose Udrih does it become a possible desperate pick to fill that spot with something.
You should never make a draft pick out of desperation. Now, there is a difference between drafting out of desperation and drafting for need - in the latter case, if all other things are equal (at least so far as you can project) it's totally acceptable to take a player that fills a positional need. But you don't want to skip on players you think are more talented in order to have a body filling a position next year, especially when the team is in rebuilding mode.
If we think that Beno is going elsewhere, then (barring some sort of trade) we're going to have to resign ourselves to at least one year of, say, Anthony Johnson or other replacement-level PG whether we draft a PG or not.
However, at this point I'm going to guess that we'll be drafting either Westbrook or Augustin if they're on the board. I don't think that any player obviously better than those two will be left by the time we pick, so all things being more or less equal we will draft for need - our need at PG being more profound than our need at PF.
Using your own analogy, if there's a PF thats a better player available when we pick, then we should take the PF, regardless of our need at the point.
I would generally agree with this. You should draft based on talent more than need. Although I advocate using a tiered system, where you divide the players into tiers and at your pick you draft the player in that tier who fits your biggest need. However, you do not reach outside of the tier to draft for a position.
Exactly. I'm not quite sure how to set the tiers, but I'd think something like this:
1: Beasley, Rose
2: Mayo, Bayless, Lopez
3: Love, Gallinari, Randolph, Jordan
4: Gordon, Arthur, Westbrook, Augustin, Greene, Alexander
5: Speights, Batum, McGee, Budinger
For that tiering, we can pretty much guarantee picking out of Tier 4 at #12. Tiers 1 and 2 will be completely gone, and three 4s or 5s would have to go in front of us to have a Tier 3 drop to us. But assuming two Tier 4 players gone - unless those two are Westbrook and Augustin, we should take a point guard.
If Tiers 1-3, Westbrook, and Augustin go in front of us, we probably draft Arthur unless we think Gordon can convert to PG (Gordon apparently thinks this), or we think either Alexander (unlikely) or Greene (more likely) will be able to hold his own at the PF in the Association. At least, that's my guess for now.
Now...who are we bringing in for workouts?
^^ Yeah, I'd probably put Gordon in Tier 3 too, I think he'll be gone by the time we pick. I was watching a video on youtube recently about the top 5 prospects and he was ranked #2 (above Rose)![]()
There are many great athletes in this year’s draft, but Russell Westrbrook is in an entirely different category in terms of his strength, agility and body control.
While he is still raw offensively, his play on the defensive end of the floor is simply suffocating. Westbrook can shadow just about any wing 6-7 or under and should be a top-three perimeter defender in the entire NBA almost immediately. He is superbly quick with his lateral movement and is intimidating in the air on-ball and off-ball as a shotblocker. His extremely fast hands will create many deflections, takeaways and turn routine passes and shot attempts into ones of a high degree of difficulty.
He also does the subtle things on defense well, such as attempting to prevent the ball from being swung and applying help pressure on the post. He is extremely fast at catching back up to his man on the trail after he has been screened off-ball.
Offensively, Westbrook will make a brilliant dribble move for a 3-pointer, but then he will shoot an airball on a dribble drive from the wing into the lane.
He can so quickly get into the lane and to the rim from the perimeter, as fast as anyone, even the greats. Westbrook is patient and controlled with the ball in the paint and can hang in the air long enough to alter his shot to dodge a defender and then use the glass for a bank shot; or he will be able to find an open spot-up shooter for a kick out.
He will make sophisticated moves where he creates space for himself by bouncing off contact he himself initiates for a mid-range jumper. Westbrook will also use a stutter step or a change of pace, not always relying on being able to turn the corner with his quickness.
Westbrook is just about as good as anyone I’ve ever seen at splitting two defenders, both in a fastbreak situation and in the halfcourt and thus you get a lot of Monta Ellis comparisons (Ellis can’t compare defensively and Westbrook has shown more promise as a point guard, so how high would Monta go in this draft if you were to automatically upload those two qualities to his game?).
He is by no means a great shooter at this point but he should eventually evolve into an above average one; he just needs to become more relaxed and develop greater consistency through more experience and repetition. He already is capable of shooting from 23-feet out with confidence. Westbrook must become increasingly economical with his shot selection as well; he gets too ambitious sometimes and it leads to a short brick or many many charge calls when he drives.
There is a little hitch in his form when he brings his ball to his hairline that causes some inconsistencies and inexcusable left/right misses, but his follow-through is solid and it is very compact and quick without any wasted motion. He should, however, elevate with more regularity as a jump shooter; but he is just a few minor tweaks away from having very good shooting form overall.
When he doesn’t have the ball in his hands, he moves extremely well, making weak side cuts to the bucket, smartly drifting to open space on the perimeter or getting himself low and wide when posting up a smaller man in the paint.
Westbrook also looks to move without the ball after making a pass instead of becoming a spectator.
In transition offense, Westbrook is probably at his best. He has an insanely fast dribble in the open floor, covering so much ground in a few seconds and then he has a second level of closing speed when he smells the bucket. The way he flies to the rim for dunks is already part of YouTube lore, but he has more nuances than just the speed and air arsenal. Westbrook instinctively knows how to fill lanes, time his arrival with other players and I’ve also seen him complete sophisticated crossover dribbles in the middle of a fastbreak.
He is excellent at catching the ball and looks like he can step onto a football field as a wide receiver with the way he would catch those long outlet passes from Kevin Love. He rarely fumbles the ball, catching it cleanly no matter if the pass is good or if he has to go up in the air for it and is also solid on the handoff.
His abilities as a pure point guard are difficult to judge because he has played limited minutes at the position despite the early season injury to Darren Collison. If we had a greater sample size to judge from, Westbrook would probably be the third best prospect in this draft because of how well he does everything else.
What we can judge is how Westbrook performs when doing point guard-like things. He gets can break his man down off the dribble and will intuitively draw defenders to him to set up a shovel bounce pass for a lay-up. He will also use a shovel pass to a trailer in transition for an easy dunk. When he jumpstops into the lane instead of attempting an out of control runner, his decision-making improves ten-fold and he becomes a highly effective and even imaginative passer.
His handle is very solid with either hand, but is decidedly more comfortable when he is dribbling vertically instead of horizontally or in one place when running the offense. It might be for that reason that he sometimes goes a little long around the screen on a pick-and-roll, negating some of its effectiveness.
But he is sometimes mistake prone in setting up an offense if the available options are not obvious. He’d be most ideally suited running a motion offense where he can move instead of remaining just beyond the top of the key as he sometimes did when running the UCLA offense.
When he makes a mistake on the offensive end, such as he did against Arizona when he makes a lazy pass that gets picked off, he will sprint back to follow the play for a block attempt.
Any college sophomore who plays defense at such a high level almost automatically has great intangibles. He clearly cares about the game and about getting better; his FIC40 nearly doubled from his freshman season (6.3 to 11.3).
If you rate the 2008 Draft class as pure basketball players, I’m not sure Russell Westbrook would be included in the top-20 at this point in his development; but his feel for the game is so naturally sophisticated and his fundamentals will eventually catch up with his instincts and athleticism, which will transform him into a player that can consistently make the types of plays on both sides of the floor we only see from the very elite.
http://www.realgm.com/src_fromtherafters/168/20080603/draft_report_russell_westbrook_of_ucla/
Up until last season when Westbrook sort of exploded out of nowhere he was listed at 6'2" everywhere. Coming out of high school as a not highly sought after recruit he was listed at 6'2." Westbrook's freshman year at UCLA he was listed at 6'2" - suddenly 6'3" as he started getting lots of attention his sophomore year.
I stand by my prediction of his height and will be very surprised if he makes it more than a half-inch over what I said. But, who cares to quibble over maybe a half-inch to one inch. Big guard/PG reserve Cisco Garcia at 6'6"-6'7" and is already doing the things Westbrook is said to be so great at and can shoot a helluva lot better than the UCLA product. It simply makes little sense for the Kings to draft PG experiment Westbrook with Garcia and Douby on their current roster. Only if the Kings think they may lose Udrih does it become a possible desperate pick to fill that spot with something.