I’d be inclined to look at Sergio de Larrea at #21 if people think he can handle NBA physicality. He’ll probably be the guy I pick when hotnikkk makes his annual ‘favorite player’ thread.
Unfortunately he's not entering.
I’d be inclined to look at Sergio de Larrea at #21 if people think he can handle NBA physicality. He’ll probably be the guy I pick when hotnikkk makes his annual ‘favorite player’ thread.
I can't stand his jump shot, but I can't argue he has by far the best indicators of those 3.Asa Newell is everywhere on draft boards. I think he’d be awesome value at 21. He definitely has concerns about how he fits in the modern game, but so do bigs who will be drafted ahead of him. Queen and CMB are way more skilled with the ball, but Newell is the most promising shooter imo and also has defensive potential. He’s a great athlete.
DX has it:
5. Fears
6. Tre
7. Kas
I mean, the Jazz have a huge hole at the backup 5. They are terrible defensively, especially when Walker is off the court. I think it just makes sense to have another 5 to develop behind Walker.Chewing on this and I’m probably ahead of myself, but I don’t think he and Walker can coexist. Could maybe trade Walker for a mini-haul and it would maybe go farther than any single move to assure an organic tank.
Really big and athletic. He's kind of on the skinnier side now, but I think he has a good frame for muscle. Looks like he can defend the rim and switch when needed. Extremely fast in the open court. Quick jumper with a big vertical reach. His jump shot/FT doesnt look awful.Don’t know anything about him. My question is what does he bring that makes you say that he could be special?
I've been watching a lot of Fears film on the Cashiggy YouTube site and he should definitely be a lottery pick, maybe top 10. I'm not sure I can get much higher than that.
I think the draft is fairly level in the 6-10 range, so whether a team likes Kon, Queen, Fears, Kasparas, even CMB, becomes eye-of-the-beholder. Fears is only 18 and has some potential to develop into a starting lead guard, but you have to be a bit imaginative to see it. In a nutshell, he plays a bit like a young Dame Lillard, but he doesn't shoot like Lillard.
Could you post what they have to say about Fland? Sounds like he was part of the workout as well.What DX had to say about Fears, Tre, and Kas. I think the big debate will come if we land number #5. 1 and 2 are obvious, 3 and 4 may change order but also seem to be set in stone for those spots. Seems like Fears is cooking in the workouts.
I can't stand his jump shot, but I can't argue he has by far the best indicators of those 3.
Could you post what they have to say about Fland? Sounds like he was part of the workout as well.
I'm very curious if he stays in the draft and if so, what range he'll end up in projections.
Kind of crazy that he was pretty definitively a first rounder until he hurt his hand.Fland not ranked high enough to have a comment made about him, but he is ranked 53rd.
Thanks for posting. I need to do more research on Fears. My faith in Kas hasn’t wavered much. I still don’t know what I think about Tre.What DX had to say about Fears, Tre, and Kas. I think the big debate will come if we land number #5. 1 and 2 are obvious, 3 and 4 may change order but also seem to be set in stone for those spots. Seems like Fears is cooking in the workouts.
Hand under the ball (truly shot one-handed, guide hand is there just in case), shooting arm is as close to 180 degrees/perfectly perpendicular to the rim as possible.I'm still not sure how to weigh form. Some people say good form is a reason why a guy can shoot, some say bad for is why he can improve, and I'm definitely not convinced we even know what good form is (if it exists) in detail. For me, I feel most comfortable not weighing it much until someone can demonstrate how it's been useful over a larger sample size.
I would tend to think it would be guys that get an advantage versus guys that struggle. Its kind of about the second layer of defense and I think Ace's issues are more about getting enough space/separation on the first step or in his individual moves. For either guy I could see their lives being really different because of having more space and having actual teammates who weren't trash. College basketball is sometimes a different sport lol.Another thing that I see gets argued both ways....who benefits most from NBA spacing? Let's just take Harper and Ace for example. Some people will say that Ace can't get to the rim because of poor spacing. Then you have Harper who gets to the rim at will with the same spacing and people will say once he gets to the NBA he will go bonkers. Logically, I think both makes sense....but who actually benefits from NBA spacing the most/suffers from NCAA spacing? Is it the guys who can't get to the rim or is it the guys who can get to the rim despite the poor spacing?
Good shooters. They draw their own defender in and thus can get behind them to make use of that space.Another thing that I see gets argued both ways....who benefits most from NBA spacing? Let's just take Harper and Ace for example. Some people will say that Ace can't get to the rim because of poor spacing. Then you have Harper who gets to the rim at will with the same spacing and people will say once he gets to the NBA he will go bonkers. Logically, I think both makes sense....but who actually benefits from NBA spacing the most/suffers from NCAA spacing? Is it the guys who can't get to the rim or is it the guys who can get to the rim despite the poor spacing?
ha. the thought i had watching last night (and i like yours better) was that he looked like Carmelo if Carmelo were a freaking monster and could pass.Banchero is like putting Carmelo into Lebrons body
i'd probably take de larrea in the lottery if he were in the draft.I’d be inclined to look at Sergio de Larrea at #21 if people think he can handle NBA physicality. He’ll probably be the guy I pick when hotnikkk makes his annual ‘favorite player’ thread.
I would tend to think it would be guys that get an advantage versus guys that struggle. Its kind of about the second layer of defense and I think Ace's issues are more about getting enough space/separation on the first step or in his individual moves. For either guy I could see their lives being really different because of having more space and having actual teammates who weren't trash. College basketball is sometimes a different sport lol.