crazy-canuck wrote:lipoli390 wrote:Latest speculation is that the Wolves have made a commitment to take Hachimura at #11 if he's still available. I just can't see drafting a player who had only 6.5 rebounds and 0.7 blocks in 30 minutes as 3rd year college PF. He has no track meaningful record as a 3-point shooter since he only took 1 shot per game from behind the arc last season. And his 74% free-throw shooting doesn't suggest the makings of a good perimeter shooter. So I have to hope this speculation is wrong or simply part of a Wolves ruse to entice teams to trade up for the Wolves pick.
we are also working out guys that shouldnt be in our range like White and Doumbouya. White was one of those guys that was rumored to have a promise in the top 6.
Cant see why the agents would let these guys come in unless they know something.
I watched some Rui while watching clarke, and the first thing you notice is that his defense is really, bad. Hes not the "i dont want to do more when I can do more" type defense that we see from wiggins, its more the "I have no idea whats happening, so I wont bother" defense we see from Lavine.
Yes, I think Rui's defense is my biggest concern. Most draft reviews of him are critical of his defense. I think your characterization of his poor defense is accurate. By all accounts, Rui has a great motor. So as you suggested, his defensive woes seem to stem from cluelessness -- I'd call it lack of good defensive instincts. As you said, it's the same problem that Zach has. I would add the same problem Towns has. I wouldn't say that it becomes an "I don't care" situation. I just think these guys have poor defensive instincts and it might look sometimes like they don't care. The question is whether and how much poor defensive instincts can improve over time once a player gets to the NBA.
With Rui, I'm also concerned about his rebounding. 6.5 rebounds in 30 minutes for a power forward in college is bad. And college rebounding is a stat that usually replicates itself in the NBA.