Both Niang and Bradley had awful stretches that really hurt us. The fact that Brantley and Morgan didn't get any run at all when our backup bigs struggled pretty much all season says a LOT about how the team feels about them. Yeah they are rookies without defined roles yet. But they didn't even get a look when our bench was nightmarish. Not even a one or two game "**** it" let's try this.
Like I said, obviously they value shooting. But I think you're too focused on shooting. Just because they value it doesn't mean every player they draft will have that skill.
I think you are underrating Achiuwa's ball skills. He has shown the ability to grab a rebound and take it from end of the floor to the other himself. He can face up and drive. He's shown some vision. It's just a raw unharnessed offensive package. The template is good.
Also you are VERY wrong when you say that we don't need an energy big. Thats exactly what we need. Some Jazz stats from this season....
3 point % - 1st in the NBA
^^^^ Every key player involved in making us #1 should be back next season.
Offensive Rebounds - 26th in the NBA
Rebounds - 13th in the NBA
Steals - 30th in the NBA
Blocks - 29th in the NBA
Field Goal Attempts per game - 29th in the NBA
Hell let's assume you are right and Achiuwa is just a 5 (I disagree, I think he's more versatile, but let's say he is). I think having him on the floor as the backup 5 instead of Bradley makes Niang more viable. He would cover Niangs weaknesses better than Bradley. Bradley is just a drop big whereas Achiuwa can guard different positions allowing the Jazz to more easily hide Niangs shortcomings defensively. Achiuwa would also create more turnovers than Bradley is leading to more breaks and easier offense. He'd be a better passer. The Jazz could experiment with more 5 out stuff and give shooters even more space.
See the great thing about drafting an Achiuwa or Reed IMO is that it gives our rotations more flexibility. Quin has different play style options. You're looking at it as less shooting. I'm looking at it as the shooting is still there but there's also a new element to what we can do. All the stuff the Jazz had this season would still be available to them.
If you were to ask me which of the following bigs could play effective minutes at the 4, with the options being Isaiah Stewart, Precious Achiuwa, Vernon Carey, Jalen Smith and Reggie Perry, I think the best answer might be Perry.
He's 6'9" 250 lbs., 7'+ wingspan (Horford measurables), and seems to have enough handle, body control, passing ability and shooting touch that he might be able to play meaningful minutes at the 4. The only question would be his ability to guard switches, but I think he can do that better than Carey and Smith at a minimum.
I'm going through his stats and some of his tape, and he looks like he could be a value-pick version of Al Horford. At a minimum, his SEC stats as a sophomore easily compare with Grant Williams. His NBA Combine athleticism numbers from last year eclipse Williams' as well. Like Williams, he's the SEC POTY.
He might be a decent solution for a versatile 4/5.
I think your take on Perry is pretty good. I think your underating Precious and Jalen Smith though.
Jalen Smith is a playerthat should probably get more hype here. If Utah thinks he can eventually be a match with the defense, he could be a pretty high reward pick this late in the draft
If the Jazz stay at #23 or #24 in the draft, I think they're very likely to draft one of -- Maledon, Bolmaro, McDaniels or Josh Green. I could even see them shocking everyone and taking Elijah Hughes. Maybe someone unexpected will drop.
I agree that the Jazz do need more size, length and toughness, but a backup 5 is one of the easiest and least expensive positions to fill through free agency.
Maybe Achiuwa will develop more skills. Until he does, he's pretty much a better version of Jordan Hill, imo, and I don't think the Jazz would make him a priority.
I can see the appeal of Reed, if and only if the Jazz think they can fix and improve his shooting. If Reed can't improve his shooting, then he becomes a somewhat better version of Mo Harkless.
At that point, Tyler Bey might also enter the discussion.
I really don't think the Jazz are going to put someone on the floor who doesn't need to be guarded. They've fought that battle with Favors and Rubio, and it isn't ideal.
On average only around 20 players in each draft actually become NBA rotation players. Only around 5 of those 20 become All Stars. So figuring out which 20 players will translate in a given year is the key to success. I'm willing to bet Achiuwa is one of those 20. Why? He's one of the best athletes in the class. He's one of the best rebounders in the class (always a great indicator). Multipositional defender, can guard 3-5, valuable skill. High motor.
I'm just gonna leave the topic there though. I want to move on to some other names.
So lets say Utah took one of; Malachi Flynn, Peyton Pritchard, Devon Dotson or Tyrell Terry in the 1st rd. People here would hate it?