I think pick #5 will come down to Vonleh and Exum.
I think pick #5 will come down to Vonleh and Exum.
None of these undersized PF's with long wingspans who were predicted to be defensive force ( Diogu, Udoh, Byombo, etc) panned out except of B.Wallace. What are the chance that Wonleh will be the one? 7'4 wingspan or not he will not be able to defend true 7 footers, same as Favors is struggling to do it. If we go big we need Embiid, since it is not possible we should get Gordon, at least we will have elite defender at wing spot.
Guarding SFs is certainly one of Gordon's selling points but you need more. Chris Singleton was an athletic defensive monster in college with PF size that projected to guard SFs. Well ya he can guard them in the NBA, but is a borderline bust that gets about 10 minutes a game because he just isn't an offensive threat.
per DX:
While Florida State combo-forward Chris Singleton will likely not receive any votes for ACC Player of the Year this season, there are few players in the country with his physical tools and NBA potential. Since arriving at Florida State, Singleton has been an equally frustrating and tantalizing player, capable of dominating one game and struggling badly the next. His boom or bust style complicates his NBA draft stock and is definitely worth watching as this season progresses. That said, there is no denying Singleton's potential.
At 6'8 with a NBA-ready frame, Singleton has outstanding size for an NBA small forward and, while he is a bit undersized for a power forward, he has great length to compensate. As we have mentioned before, his athleticism is outstanding, boasting NBA-caliber quickness, explosiveness, and fluidity. It is needless to say that Singleton looks the part, which makes his struggles at the collegiate level all the more frustrating.
Defensively, Singleton remains one of the most versatile players in all of college basketball. His athleticism, length and strength allow him to make a huge impact all over the floor, and you'll regularly see him switch between guards and big men over the course of a single game and at times a single possession.
If he didn't have the ability to get into a stance, the hips, feet, and knees necessary to guard 3's. If he was a 1.5" shorter. If he was quite a bit less athletic. If he was going to be 21 on draft day, instead of 18. If he was a definite and extremely undersized C and PF, as opposed to an SF who could play situational PF. Didn't have the handles. Didn't have the court vision or passing ability. Etc. Then maybe you'd have an inkling of a point.
There are lots of players who have heart, excel at rebounding, and putbacks, but there are very very few who can do all the things A. Gordon can do, and who posess his body type, and are as young as him. Your comparison just isn't an accurate one.
A. Gordon is far superior to the "Manimal". Faried's ceiling is/ was that of a two story house. Gordon's is that of the tower of babel.
Guarding SFs is certainly one of Gordon's selling points but you need more. Chris Singleton was an athletic defensive monster in college with PF size that projected to guard SFs. Well ya he can guard them in the NBA, but is a borderline bust that gets about 10 minutes a game because he just isn't an offensive threat.
Guarding SFs is certainly one of Gordon's selling points but you need more. Chris Singleton was an athletic defensive monster in college with PF size that projected to guard SFs. Well ya he can guard them in the NBA, but is a borderline bust that gets about 10 minutes a game because he just isn't an offensive threat.
per DX:
While Florida State combo-forward Chris Singleton will likely not receive any votes for ACC Player of the Year this season, there are few players in the country with his physical tools and NBA potential. Since arriving at Florida State, Singleton has been an equally frustrating and tantalizing player, capable of dominating one game and struggling badly the next. His boom or bust style complicates his NBA draft stock and is definitely worth watching as this season progresses. That said, there is no denying Singleton's potential.
At 6'8 with a NBA-ready frame, Singleton has outstanding size for an NBA small forward and, while he is a bit undersized for a power forward, he has great length to compensate. As we have mentioned before, his athleticism is outstanding, boasting NBA-caliber quickness, explosiveness, and fluidity. It is needless to say that Singleton looks the part, which makes his struggles at the collegiate level all the more frustrating.
Defensively, Singleton remains one of the most versatile players in all of college basketball. His athleticism, length and strength allow him to make a huge impact all over the floor, and you'll regularly see him switch between guards and big men over the course of a single game and at times a single possession.
And your opinion of him is super inflated as always which is never a surprise.
I like Gordon, but the skills you that declare he has screams Kenneth farid. I don't want that at number 5.
If he didn't have the ability to get into a stance, the hips, feet, and knees necessary to guard 3's. If he was a 1.5" shorter. If he was quite a bit less athletic. If he was going to be 21 on draft day, instead of 18. If he was a definite and extremely undersized C and PF, as opposed to an SF who could play situational PF. Didn't have the handles. Didn't have the court vision or passing ability. Etc. Then maybe you'd have an inkling of a point.
There are lots of players who have heart, excel at rebounding, and putbacks, but there are very very few who can do all the things A. Gordon can do, and who posess his body type, and are as young as him. Your comparison just isn't an accurate one.
A. Gordon is far superior to the "Manimal". Faried's ceiling is/ was that of a two story house. Gordon's is that of the tower of babel.
Post of the year. I'm on tapetalk, can someone rep Vermin for me?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk