Blazers hold draft workout

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VanillaGorilla

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Trail Blazers begin NBA draft

The Blazers worked out E'Twaun Moore of Purdue, Lavoy Allen of Temple, Talor Battle of Penn State, Malcolm Delaney of Virginia Tech, Eniel Polynice of Mississippi, Alex Tyus of Florida and Mike Davis of Illinois.

Others were Dominic Waters of Portland State, Devan Downey of South Carolina, NBDL player Jeremy Wise, Donald Sloan of Texas A&M and Connecticut's Gavin Edwards.

...

Buchanan said the Blazers probably won't host another workout until the beginning of June, but they will have ample opportunities to investigate prospects in the meantime

Do any of these players interest you for our second round pick or any other reason?
 
Only Dominic waters because I went to highschool and middle school with him haha. I didn't follow much of his college career but I remember him being pretty good at scoring
 
After doing a little research, i found out that 8 of these 12 players are either point guards or undersized Shooting guards who might be able to convert to point guards; this seems to indicate that the Blazers don't think Bayless is the longterm answer at PG (and I agree). The other four players were all power forwards, they were all labeled with terms like "soft", "doesn't like contact", rail-thin"; so I don't know what they are looking for there. Maybe they miss Channing Frye.

The only player who seemed interesting to me was Dominic Waters who had good size for a PG and had a .435 3-pt shooting percentage, led his league in assists and free throw percentage, but he was not even in the database of draftexpress or nbadraft.net. So I have no idea what his defensive ability might be or even his athleticism.
 
I see that Chad Buchanan says they expect all 7 of the underclassmen in the workouts to go back to school, so i guess a lot of this was just kind of a getting acquainted thing.
 
I can't say any of those guys get me particularly excited, but then again most of these guys are fringe second rounders so they're probably just trying to get feedback on whether or not they should pull out or stay in -- although I believe the deadline was yesterday if I'm not mistaken?

As for them bringing in a lot of combo guards and point guards I suppose you could infer that they aren't sold on Bayless as PGOTF, as I think it's fairly apparent he's probably "backup shooting guard of the future" on this team (if he stays), but who knows.
 
After doing a little research, i found out that 8 of these 12 players are either point guards or undersized Shooting guards who might be able to convert to point guards; this seems to indicate that the Blazers don't think Bayless is the longterm answer at PG (and I agree). The other four players were all power forwards, they were all labeled with terms like "soft", "doesn't like contact", rail-thin"; so I don't know what they are looking for there. Maybe they miss Channing Frye.

The only player who seemed interesting to me was Dominic Waters who had good size for a PG and had a .435 3-pt shooting percentage, led his league in assists and free throw percentage, but he was not even in the database of draftexpress or nbadraft.net. So I have no idea what his defensive ability might be or even his athleticism.
I'd guess that who they have coming in this early doesn't reflect an assessment of their roster but rather who wants to show up and work out.

my own take is that they have no pressing needs and plenty of worthy players already under contract. Still they'll want to add talent to their group with every opportunity. I look for them to package the pick and move up or out of the draft altogether.

STOMP
 
I think we need to target a great defender at guard above all else. But who are the top defenders in College Basketball? Anyone have ESPN insider who can summarize this ranking by Franschilla?

I'll take a look ...

Edit:

Some "point" guards
Chris Kramer, 6-3, Sr., Purdue
Kramer, a former Indiana high school football star, has definitely brought that gridiron toughness to West Lafayette the past few years. In fact, he has made three straight Big Ten All-Defensive Teams and was the conference Defensive Player of the Year in 2008. He gets up so close to his man that he can smell what they had for breakfast last Tuesday and he'll catch the occasional inadvertent elbow, as well.

Avery Bradley, 6-3, Fr., Texas
It's rare to put a freshman on a defensive team like this before he's even played a game. But I know Rick Barnes well enough and have seen Bradley enough to know that this is a marriage made in hoops heaven. Bradley has the quickness, athleticism and mental makeup to be one of the nation's best defensive stoppers immediately. Bradley, Tiller and Texas A&M's Donald Sloan will make life miserable for Big 12 point guards all season long.

J.T. Tiller, 6-3, Sr., Missouri
Tiller was the Big 12's Co-Defensive Player of the Year (along with KU's Cole Aldrich) and is the catalyst for the Tigers' great pressure defense. He has the mentality of an All-Pro NFL "shutdown" cornerback. The kind of toughness that he exudes for coach Mike Anderson's team is a primary reason for last season's record-setting 31-win campaign.

Devan Downey, 5-9, Sr., South Carolina
Downey is one of the quickest players in college basketball and that particularly manifests itself on the defensive end. He is a pure pest who, because of his size, plays so close to the ground that he is able to get right up into opposing point guards and keep them from easily running their offense. Downey has had almost 200 steals over the past two seasons, and that translates into a lot of easy buckets for the Gamecocks.

Venoy Overton, 5-11, Sr., Washington
While some opponents in the Pac-10 think that his mouth moves as fast as his defensive slides, there is no denying that Overton has become one of the best defensive players in the country. He has all of the characteristics of an excellent on-ball defender. He is quick, strong, tough and tough-minded. If you underestimate his importance to the Huskies' success, you are making a huge mistake.
 
I've seen Dominic Waters play for Portland State several times and he's really good.
I'm not sure if he'll play in the NBA, but I wouldn't count him out though.
 
I've seen Dominic Waters play for Portland State several times and he's really good.
I'm not sure if he'll play in the NBA, but I wouldn't count him out though.

How was his defense?
 
Overton's good on D, but awfully one-dimensional.

Say it with me....Pondexter.
 
is that you, Mr. Barkley?
Tur-ble?
 
How was his defense?

Good, but he wasn't playing against anyone of note really.

Waters is a very good all round player, with no real weaknesses. He's definitely the best pro prospect I've seen at Portland State since I started attending games about six years ago. He's a more polished point guard than Bayless or Mills, and a good athlete, but doesn't possess the hops of Bayless nor the Quickness of Mills. A little above average athlete I'd say.
He'll play professionally somewhere, but may not be the NBA.
 

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