Jazzmix
Well-Known Member
If you're looking for stars then total projects that don't possess a standout NBA skill/trait isn't the place to look.
Also history says there's only 5 all stars on average per draft. Usually most of them go near the top of the draft.
Oh and I'd like to point out that several players who were pegged as "just role players" ended up becoming all stars. Rudy Gobert, Kyle Lowry, Paul Millsap, Pascal Siakam, Domantas Sabonis. Wanna know why? They had standout skills/traits that allowed them to get on the floor for a team in a specific role. And once they had their foot in the door they were able to expand their games.
Really like your approach to the process. One more advantage of what you propose would be that a player who has one NBA level skill is immediately an asset in hypothetical trade contrary to the promising project. And we lack in those right now after we gutted ourselves with the trade for Conley.