And explain why 5 other teams (who did know him) passed on mudiay.
5 teams pass, it is completely logical. But somehow and in some way when it gets to us he just cannot be passed up by some analysts or fans.
I love it. "With cousins, without cousins, with Karl without Karl".
Sending a message to everyone, no coddling, get on board the trains leaving with or without you.
"Darren is a true King, he wants to be here, that's what we need, we need to get him help"
Love it, you need guys that want to be here, DC is a class act and true pro. I think the less roster turnover the better. We just need PG help and a starting 2, or veteran 2 to play on front or behind Ben. Casspi should be back, he just fits, and I want to see he and WCS playing together.
I'm not Kingster, but three of the teams that passed on Mudiay took (consensus) better players, one is already stacked with young guards and took a (consensus) equal player at a position of need, and one is the Knicks.
But he wasn't BPA for three of those teams, and he was a fit problem for one of them. The Knicks are really the only team that raises an eyebrow, and they went for DirkUpside. I thought Mudiay was both BPA and a good fit for the Kings. I could be wrong. And I like WCS, don't get me wrong. He makes us better. But I don't know if he can ever put us over the top - I hope so, but I don't know.
The disappointment that I have with the quote from Vlade is that he didn't say he knew enough to be comfortable passing on Mudiay, he said he didn't know enough to be comfortable picking Mudiay. I want Vlade to be acting from maximum information, and in this case he appears to not have been. We know he was recently over in Europe (and presumably getting in close looks and face time with Hezonja/Porzingis) so it's not like he was slacking on the draft. He probably knew enough about those two. And yes, Mudiay didn't go to the combine and didn't work out for us. I think it's obvious that both of those decisions (likely his agent's) didn't help him and may have hurt him.
And maybe we pin all the blame on Mudiay and his agent and none on Vlade. Fine by me. I just think it's unfortunate that we were in position to draft a kid who is widely believed to have star potential (note the word "potential") and we passed on him because we didn't know enough. This isn't some diamond in the rough that we may have missed. This is a kid we knew we needed to know enough about, and we didn't.
Well doesn't a PF/C, who is quick enough to guard the perimeter, can jump out of the building, runs like a deer, have some star potential too? Why is Willie's ceiling considered defensive roleplayer, while Mudiays ceiling is future Star?
For me it's really difficult to figure it out, how those assessments on those young guys work.
People often get overfascinated by physical traits, especially running and jumping. Mean nothing without game. Now for WCS they have translated very much to his defensive game, and that's the hope. But he can't do much on the other end, so he can run and jump all he wants, but if the ball doesn't come with him he won't be any star, while a mediocre athelte like Okafor has a shot.
People often get overfascinated by physical traits, especially running and jumping. Mean nothing without game. Now for WCS they have translated very much to his defensive game, and that's the hope. But he can't do much on the other end, so he can run and jump all he wants, but if the ball doesn't come with him he won't be any star, while a mediocre athelte like Okafor has a shot.
The good organizations do their research and know things the bad organizations don't. That's what separates the big boys from the weak sisters. The Kings org had plenty of time to do their homework. There are no excuses in the NBA. Not knowing about Mudiay is a fail, regardless of whether it's Vlade, PDA, Vivek, the Kings scouting staff, or whomever. Will not knowing about Mudiay hurt the Kings? Time will tell on that. Maybe they get bailed out and it doesn't hurt them. Or maybe it haunts them for a long time.
PS I find it so weak (it reminds me of the Kings org) that the focus is on "you just don't like Vlade." Weak, weak, weak. Sounds like a juvenile who wants everyone to love her girlie crush. The cult of personality is the substitute for a logical argument apparently.
And maybe we pin all the blame on Mudiay and his agent and none on Vlade. Fine by me. I just think it's unfortunate that we were in position to draft a kid who is widely believed to have star potential (note the word "potential") and we passed on him because we didn't know enough. This isn't some diamond in the rough that we may have missed. This is a kid we knew we needed to know enough about, and we didn't.
LOL at the Mudiay complaints.
1. Guy refuses to go to draft combine
2. Refuses to work out
3. Won't even pick up the phone
4. Only thing you have is hearsay and a couple of videos from China
Reeks of fear to me, fear of honest assessment.
The disappointment that I have with the quote from Vlade is that he didn't say he knew enough to be comfortable passing on Mudiay, he said he didn't know enough to be comfortable picking Mudiay. I want Vlade to be acting from maximum information, and in this case he appears to not have been. We know he was recently over in Europe (and presumably getting in close looks and face time with Hezonja/Porzingis) so it's not like he was slacking on the draft. He probably knew enough about those two. And yes, Mudiay didn't go to the combine and didn't work out for us. I think it's obvious that both of those decisions (likely his agent's) didn't help him and may have hurt him.
And maybe we pin all the blame on Mudiay and his agent and none on Vlade. Fine by me. I just think it's unfortunate that we were in position to draft a kid who is widely believed to have star potential (note the word "potential") and we passed on him because we didn't know enough. This isn't some diamond in the rough that we may have missed. This is a kid we knew we needed to know enough about, and we didn't.
Depends if he has the IQ to use these physical traits for his advantage. And if a player becomes a star is actually more a question of opportunity, work ethic and the coaching staff, that develops his skillset, than it's about potential when coming out of college.
Actually great athlete is a solid foundation to build on, especially as a PF/C.
You really don't develop tremendously from 22-23 onward. By 25 its rarely more than just smoothing out your game. Unless Calipari has been a blithering idiot and sitting on a huge star for no reason, by this point in his career WCS is probably half a million dribbles and 100,000 skyhooks behind the offensive geniuses. Its like seeing a great athlete on the tennis court at 18, and saying they can pick up the game. Not really. They can get better, but great tennis players are made by 10s of thousands of hours put in as a kid.
Seriously Capt? You're going to be disappointed in Vlade because of his choice of verbage? smh
You really don't develop tremendously from 22-23 onward. By 25 its rarely more than just smoothing out your game. Unless Calipari has been a blithering idiot and sitting on a huge star for no reason, by this point in his career WCS is probably half a million dribbles and 100,000 skyhooks behind the offensive geniuses. Its like seeing a great athlete on the tennis court at 18, and saying they can pick up the game. Not really. They can get better, but great tennis players are made by 10s of thousands of hours put in as a kid.
Uh... Brick he can add a jumpshot and a few post moves. Let's not equate that with Michael Jordan trying to win the French Open.
It's not like you come into the league and you either have game or you haven't.
Sounds tempting, but why are there quite a lot of examples coming to my mind, where players developed skills during their NBA career, that they hadn't at the start of their careers?
Even low value players like Drew Gooden can change their games in their early 30's. A guy like Meyers Leonard turned himself into a 3pt-shooter, cause he saw this as his only chance to get playing time behind Lopez. Gibson developed a very decent postgame over his career. There are actually countless of examples and you don't need to be espescially gifted to develop certain skills.
It's not like you come into the league and you either have game or you haven't. There are more factors, that make a great player.
All that WCS needs to be a decent offensive weapon next to Cousins is a solid jumpshot. And a guy this athletic with a nice stroke from outside would be a pretty special player for me.![]()
i have so much trouble with this logic. how are you going "to know enough about" a prospect that's only played in high school
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You really don't develop tremendously from 22-23 onward. By 25 its rarely more than just smoothing out your game. Unless Calipari has been a blithering idiot and sitting on a huge star for no reason, by this point in his career WCS is probably half a million dribbles and 100,000 skyhooks behind the offensive geniuses. Its like seeing a great athlete on the tennis court at 18, and saying they can pick up the game. Not really. They can get better, but great tennis players are made by 10s of thousands of hours put in as a kid.