khans2k5 wrote:Q12543 wrote:Camden wrote:Q12543 wrote:Camden wrote:Need to turn focus towards Brandon Ingram. That guy might have the highest ceiling in this draft, including Ben Simmons.
I feel like that between LaVine, Wiggins, and Towns, we've hit our "high upside, but is young and has to fill out more" quota. I mean, how many more 19/20 year old kids do we really need on this roster?
And one thing seems to be true with even the most promising rookies: They almost always are a net negative in their first year.
I don't know - I almost feel like trading down and getting a guy that actually has a track record of producing and having filled out is a better route to go this year (like a Denzell Valentine type). Or just trade the pick for a young-ish veteran that has taken a few laps around league and knows what he's doing out there.
I'm not opposed to trading the pick, but I just don't see many young-ish veterans that I'd trade for that would actually be available. And I'd rather not water down a top-five pick by going for four-year college players that have limited upside. They're harder to project in today's game, in my opinion.
PS: Ingram's absolute floor is a 6'9/6'10 legitimate 3/D player. Just turned 18 on September 2nd. Second youngest player in the class. Youth is one of his selling points.
I haven't really thought about much who might be available that I'd like in terms of trading the pick, so I really have no idea. I also agree that if we end up in the top 5 and don't trade out of it, then yeah, we pretty much have to go with a high upside young dude. I'm just tired of waiting for these guys to get good. LaVine and Wiggins logged thousands of minutes last season and neither have showed much progress as 2nd year vets. LaVine has been downright awful of late.
While I appreciate your knowledge of the college game, it's hard for me to take very serious any absolute declaration on a player like Ingram (in this case, what his floor is). Even the best college prospect prognosticators and front offices miss badly on occasion.
They're 20 year old sophomores for crying out loud.
Tell me who's who as sophomores.
12.1/5.6/2.4/1.6 30 MPG's
20.4/3.8/1.7/.79 35 MPG's
13.4/3.1/3.2/.6 24 MPG's
8.6/4.0/1.4/1.0 26 MPG's
The answers are PG13 compared to Wiggins and Lavine compared to Jimmy Butler. So Wiggins is slightly behind PG13 at this point overall and Lavine is slightly ahead of Butler at this point. Butler in fact didn't click until his 4th year. Expecting 2nd year players to do even more than they already are seems greatly impatient. You might want to come back down to earth and join the rest of us because your expectations seem too high for such young players. Love didn't turn it on until year 3 either for us either so I'm not sure why you are expecting so much out of sophomores just because they played a bunch on a horrible team as rookies. It typically takes 3 years so I'm not sure why you're impatient during the second year. If we're in the same spot next year then I'd get impatient.
PG-13 wasn't a #1 pick like Wiggins and he pretty much did everything better than Wiggins, except volume scoring, in his 2nd season (I see you conveniently left off 3-point shooting and overall scoring efficiency, which I value as much or more than every other stat you listed).
I'm not sure why you chose Butler as a comparison for LaVine.
I'm not sure where LaVine or Wiggins ultimately land as players - they both might be stars some day - but one of the reasons for watching a young team that struggles to win games is to hopefully witness some improvement from its young guys. I haven't seen it with these two yet.