Mote
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2009
- Messages
- 393
- Likes
- 322
- Points
- 63
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Kennard has Jon Diebler bust potentialKennard seems to be slipping.
It'd be tough to pass him up at #26.
I still go Mushidi there though.
Too smooth.
If that's the only problems with him and he falls to the 2nd then you have to go and get him.
You can teach a mindset and push someone to be better, but you can't teach 6'11, agile, athletic, with touch.
Bell needs to be a Blazer
His ball control with his left hand pretty impressive overall. The lefty in and out is definitely his go to move right now though.Left hand, In-N-Out crossover to the Baseline spin move, with the right hand finish on the left side....
Ballarinalike...
Kennard has Jon Diebler bust potential
Why? Same reason I don't like guys from the Cuse. No science, no stats.Okay, but why vs Motley?
Player.......Ht.....Wt....Wing......Pts....Reb...Ast...Blk....FG%...FT%
Bell..........6'9"...230...6'11".......11.0...8.7.....1.8....2.3... .661... .694
Motley.....6'9"...235...7'3 1/2"...17.2...9.9....2.2....1.1.... .537... .702
Motley has a much better wingspan although Bell blocks more shots. I don't think Bell is as dominant in the NBA though. Motley is much more of a scorer and slightly better in rebounds and assists while Bell shoots a higher percentage but without as much range.
Britney Griner has been excellent so far in her young career.Bigs from Baylor have been underwhelming.
Pass.what do you guys think of Devin Robinson from florida?
Those are the same knocks as the ones on Jimmy Butler, Khris Middleton, and Paul George when they came out.Pass.
He's another athletic wing who can't dribble and his shot is just OK. Seems pretty low IQ on the floor too.
i honestly would be so happy if we get him or semi at 26. but if we had to choose, which you would you rather have?Those are the same knocks as the ones on Jimmy Butler, Khris Middleton, and Paul George when they came out.
He shot 39% from 3pt, and can okay defense. He's a 3-And-D SF already. He doesn't need to be handling the ball and making tough decisions, just needs to be able to hit spot up 3s, attack closeouts, and move well off the ball.
Can't pick one over the other. Semi's a little better shooter, Robinson's a little better defender.i honestly would be so happy if we get him or semi at 26. but if we had to choose, which you would you rather have?
Can't pick one over the other. Semi's a little better shooter, Robinson's a little better defender.
yeah i think i would have to go with semi because of that reason. that kid is a freak, something we don't have on this team and he can be a good passer. i can see becoming more like jae crowderI like Semi's attacks of the basket like he wants to tear down the rim.
Then you must have not watched those guys play much in college. All three showed advanced shot making, handles and playmaking that suggested they could handle a high usage offensive role in the NBA.Those are the same knocks as the ones on Jimmy Butler, Khris Middleton, and Paul George when they came out.
He shot 39% from 3pt, and can okay defense. He's a 3-And-D SF already. He doesn't need to be handling the ball and making tough decisions, just needs to be able to hit spot up 3s, attack closeouts, and move well off the ball.
SnowflakeI've asked him repeatedly. He got tired of clowns telling him he didn't know what he was talking about so just does it on his own now. He RAVED about Gobert and Giannis when no one even knew who they were. He took a lot of flak for it at the time and just said "screw it". Don't blame him.
I see a good NBA role player with a high floor. I'd love to have a 3-and-D player on the Blazers. We have none. Big 3-And-D SFs are always drafted too low. Robinson will be another.Then you must have not watched those guys play much in college. All three showed advanced shot making, handles and playmaking that suggested they could handle a high usage offensive role in the NBA.
I'm fine with you thinking he can be a limited 3 and D player, but he hasn't shown the requisite skills to be anything more than that.
Big 3 and D players with no ball skills return borderline top 20 value if they hit their ceiling so I think early 2nd is just fine for him.I see a good NBA role player with a high floor. I'd love to have a 3-and-D player on the Blazers. We have none. Big 3-And-D SFs are always drafted too low. Robinson will be another.
He doesn't need to be a creator. A 13, 14ppg player with solid (38%+) 3pt shooting, good defense, and athleticism is a top 15 level talent in almost any draft.Big 3 and D players with no ball skills return borderline top 20 value if they hit their ceiling so I think early 2nd is just fine for him.
Stronger Wesley Johnson is his best case to me and I just can't get excited about that.
Malcolm Brogdon could dribble and make a play at the college level. It's why we heard whispers before the draft that he had PG potential. The questions surrounding him were more about how his size, shooting and athleticism would translate at the NBA level. And Wesley Matthews is such a unique case that I think trying to use him to justify another player's chances of NBA success is doing nothing for your argument.He doesn't need to be a creator. A 13, 14ppg player with solid (38%+) 3pt shooting, good defense, and athleticism is a top 15 level talent in almost any draft.
His ceiling is a better shooting, better defending Harkless. He will improve his ball skills to the point where he'll comfortably attack close-outs. He's a SF, he doesn't need to be up top doing a bunch of CJ McCollum-like hanging crossovers trying to break his man down. He doesn't need to be creating 5 assists a game.
If he learned how to do both, he'd be an all-star. That's what happened with Kawhi Leonard.
"Ball skills" is really the only knock on him, but it shouldn't be a big factor. Why? Because too many people look at a prospect as a whole player without thinking about what his NBA role will be. It's stuff like "limited upside because of limited ball skills" that cause good players to drop. Two great examples of this is Wesley Matthews and Malcolm Brogdon. He's a good rebounder, good defender, good shooter, athletic, has great length (6'8 with a 7'0 wingspan)... Those translate easily into a starting level SF. All of those are bigger factor than his ball skills, especially if he finds the right team, who has two guards that can create and need floor spacing and defense (basically, Portland).
It's funny that you knock Robinson for his ball skills, but then strongly support Kadeem Allen. Kadeem Allen needs ball skills more than Robinson, as he's a 6'3 guard, not a 6'8 SF. Meanwhile Allen is over two years older than Robinson.
I don't think there's star potential hiding in his game. I think his ceiling is a 15ppg scorer on near 40% 3pt shooting with very good defense. Basically, what we all hope Crabbe could become.Malcolm Brogdon could dribble and make a play at the college level. It's why we heard whispers before the draft that he had PG potential. The questions surrounding him were more about how his size, shooting and athleticism would translate at the NBA level. And Wesley Matthews is such a unique case that I think trying to use him to justify another player's chances of NBA success is doing nothing for your argument.
I'm not even going to get into Kadeem Allen. They are completely different players so I don't think comparing their ball skills is doing anything constructive from a prospect evaluation standpoint, but I think there is enough evidence out there to support that he'll be a valuable playmaker in some capacity. I also don't think they are in the same stratosphere defensively, both from a tools and IQ standpoint and I don't think that changes suddenly once Devin turns 24.
But getting back to the main point, I clearly see what Devin Robinson's role will be in the NBA and it's just a matter of whether his skills are at the level they'll need to be to fulfill it. I just think we disagree on the idea that there is some sort of star potential hiding in his game. There is absolutely no evidence anywhere is his tape or statistical profile that supports that idea, which wasn't the case for any of the guys you've brought up to support your argument, including Kawhi Leonard.
