Thee Jazz Fan
Well-Known Member
She’d eat you alive.i mean i'd rather shag JLo but you know ..
She’d eat you alive.i mean i'd rather shag JLo but you know ..
She’d eat you alive.
I'm sorry, but this is borderline trolling now. You list guys who aren't even All-NBA types(you know, top 15 in the league in a given year) and who have struggled to lead teams to even just a playoff berth as #1 options as players you could build a title winner around?Trae
KAT
Beal ( past his prime now but he was pretty special for a few years but unfortunately was surrounded by mediocre talent )
Good list. Good post.It's often assumed that most reliable way to get a player who is talented enough to be a number 1 on a championship team is to draft one through a top-5 pick. This may be true, but just a reminder that the odds of this happening in any particular year are quite low.
Over the last 15 drafts (75 top-5 picks) I count 9 players who have shown this type of talent: Wemby, Anthony Edwards, Williamson, Morant, Doncic, Tatum, Jalen Brown, Embiid, Anthony Davis (if you don't agree that one or more of these is talented enough to be a number 1 on a championship team, then the odds are even lower). This works out to 12% chance of getting a #1 championship piece through any particular top-5 draft choice -- or about one in every 8 years of having a top five pick. In these past 15 years there was only one year where as many as two players qualify (Williamson and Morant, two of the shakiest on this list).
(For full disclosure, the jury is still out on some of these picks, but I don't think anyone not on the list really is a true championship #1 from among other top-5 picks. This list of comes-close-or-still-has-potential-but-probably-not-a-championship-#1 includes: Banchero, Holmgren, Mobley, Barnes, Cunningham, Cousins)
There are certainly no guarantees but I think next years draft is pretty special. Also I think you are missing a few that could be a number 1 on a championship team if surrounded by the right guys.
Kyrie
Trae
KAT
Beal ( past his prime now but he was pretty special for a few years but unfortunately was surrounded by mediocre talent )
We don’t allow pedophiles in this forum.
Of course it's true. Essentially, you are confirming that having a top-5 pick is by far the most certain way to drafting "a number 1 on a championship team". Because if the team decides to acquire such a player via free agency, trade, or drafting in the 6-30 range, the chances are going to be way, way lower than 12%.It's often assumed that most reliable way to get a player who is talented enough to be a number 1 on a championship team is to draft one through a top-5 pick. This may be true...
Over the last 15 drafts (75 top-5 picks) I count 9 players who have shown this type of talent: Wemby, Anthony Edwards, Williamson, Morant, Doncic, Tatum, Jalen Brown, Embiid, Anthony Davis (if you don't agree that one or more of these is talented enough to be a number 1 on a championship team, then the odds are even lower). This works out to 12% chance of getting a #1 championship piece through any particular top-5 draft choice.
In the last 15 years there were only 5 players "who have shown this type of talent" drafted in the rest of the first round (Curry, Leonard, Giannis, Jokic, SGA), 5/(25X15)=about 1% chance per pick.
Good post.Of course it's true. Essentially, you are confirming that having a top-5 pick is by far the most certain way to drafting "a number 1 on a championship team". Because if the team decides to acquire such a player via free agency, trade, or drafting in the 6-30 range, the chances are going to be way, way lower than 12%.
In the last 15 years there were only 5 players "who have shown this type of talent" drafted in the rest of the first round (Curry, Leonard, Giannis, Jokic, SGA), 5/(25X15)=about 1% chance per pick. And only one, Jokic, was drafted in the second round - 0.2% chance. On average, you will have to draft for a century in the 6-30 range (1 pick per draft) to draft a championship player, and for 500 years - by using only a single second-round pick per year.
Most of these players remained with their own teams, with only SGA, Leonard, and Davis changing teams via trades. I will be generous and add to this the Paul-to-Clippers trade, which happened within the same timeframe. So, there were 4 chances to obtain that caliber of players in 15 years. Almost all of the teams would be ready to trade for such a player every year, so we will conservatively estimate the trade chances as 4/(25X15)=1%. Finally, here are the chances for a free agent signing ( LeBron in 2010, 2014 and 2018, Durant in 2016 and 2019, Kawhi in 2019) - 6 cases. Almost every team would gladly create space for such signing, so the conservative chances are 6/(25X15)=1.5%. And these are extremely generous estimates, assuming that a small-market team like the Jazz and the Lakers have the same chances of getting LeBron or Durant via trade or free agency.
So, trying to obtain "such a player" by securing a top 5 pick has the 12 times higher probability of success than through picking 6-30, 60 times higher chances than drafting in the second round, 12 times higher chances than getting him in a trade, and 9 times higher than signing him as a free agent.
In short, no other strategy comes even close to simply getting the top 5 pick.
How can you guarantee it?Also something that gets lost in translation is that even Hinkie who is the only gm to truely min/max the art of tanking did it in an era where worst record gave you 25% of the lottery balls.
I can guarantee you even he wouldnt do it for 14%.
He would. Because even at 14%(at the no. 1 pick exclusively... you still get great odds at top 5 pick - guaranteed if you are the worst team), this is still the best way to get "the guy" type of player.Also something that gets lost in translation is that even Hinkie who is the only gm to truely min/max the art of tanking did it in an era where worst record gave you 25% of the lottery balls.
I can guarantee you even he wouldnt do it for 14%.