Ugh. I do not like "super-raw big man project" draft picks. They're probably my least favourite draft picks. Right ahead of "hometown college hero" and "undersized scorer for a college I've never heard of" kind of picks.
It's not that I don't want the Jazz to draft a powerful defensive presence down low, it's that this you can't teach height attitude has yet to yield any real results. Biyombo fits the bill of so many failed raw big man prospects, it's not even funny. Shawn Bradley, Pavel Podkolzine, Hasheem Thabeet, DeSagana Diop, Oumare Cisse, Hasheem Thabeet, etc. All freakishly tall, all started playing basketball quite late(should be an automatic uh-oh), all played few minutes on significant level, all very deficient offensively, and of course, all flops. Not one of them learned to play any offense, and in the end even their defense didn't quite translate to the highest level. People just fall in love with potential and "upside" and assume that magically, a player will improve over time. Never mind whether the Jazz have some secret all those other teams had or not. Somehow, we'll make this Biyombo kid a Mutombo.
Yeah, Mutombo. The one guy used as an example that this can work and the one guy everyone hopes all these raw big projects will become. The only issue is that Mutombo played 3 years at Georgetown, posted very good numbers(including 15PPG his senior year) and was generally a much more finished of a product than any of these other prospects. Hell, he openly talked about his age and being 25 on draft night so you knew what you were getting, too.
It just seems like an awfully big gamble to spend either of the two top 12 picks on Hasheem Thabeet lite. As someone who's been a fan for a couple of decades, having one top 12 pick has been rare enough. I'd rather not spend one of the two on a very raw prospect. That's what second round is for.