26/06/08

Draft total NBA

La prestigiosa revista Sports Illustrated publica este interesantísimo mock Draft con todos los jugadores NBA. Se puede apreciar el orden de importancia de los jugadores, partiendo de la idea inicial de construir la franquicia alrededor del seleccionado:

1. Chicago Bulls: LeBron James, SF, 23 years old. Scary as it sounds, James might still be years away from reaching his prime. Imagine James with slight improvements in his defense and perimeter game.

2. Miami Heat: Dwight Howard, C, 22. Shot-blocking, physically intimidating, attack-the-rim centers are hard to come by. Actually, outside of Howard, they are nearly impossible. As he proved this past season in Orlando, Howard is capable of dominating even with undersized help.

3. Minnesota Timberwolves: Kobe Bryant, SG, 29. Does Bryant inspire or intimidate? Who cares as long he gets the job done, which Bryant does with staggering success.

4. Seattle SuperSonics: Chris Paul, PG, 23. Ask Phoenix or New Jersey what an elite point guard can do for you. The probing Paul is Steve Nash circa 2005 and has seven or eight prime years still in front of him.

5. Memphis Grizzlies: Yao Ming, C, 27. Size? Check. Skills? Double-check. Aggressive personality? Check, check, check. He has shrugged off his passive demeanor and become fiercely competitive, perhaps the lone attribute that had stood between Yao and greatness. Well, that and better health.

6. New York Knicks: Kevin Garnett, PF, 32. Yes, with KG as your cornerstone, you will have to find a fourth-quarter scorer. But that's about all you will need to find to complement this ultimate team player and defensive menace.

7. Los Angeles Clippers: Amaré Stoudemire, F/C, 25. Lingering questions about the health of his surgically repaired knees vanished after a 25.2-point, 9.1-rebound season in 2007-08. Dominating offense, questionable defense.

8. Milwaukee Bucks: Dwyane Wade, SG, 26. Wade's strengths -- explosive first step, attack-the-basket mentality and an improving jump shot -- speak for themselves, but questions about his long-term durability drop him a couple of notches on this list.

9. Charlotte Bobcats: Chris Bosh, PF, 24. The fluid Bosh could probably stand to put on a few pounds, but few big men can match his interior skills and feathery outside touch.

10. New Jersey Nets: Tim Duncan, F/C, 32. Only age keeps Duncan from going higher. Duncan operates out of the post like Bill Walton and is as fundamentally sound as they come. Unfortunately, the 11-year veteran has played nearly two full seasons in playoff games, meaning his decline should be only a few years away.

11. Indiana Pacers: Carmelo Anthony, SF, 24. A smooth jump shot, physical inside game and improving defense. The occasional lapse in maturity -- and some pretty good talent ahead of him -- keeps 'Melo out of the top 10.

12. Sacramento Kings: Dirk Nowitzki, PF, 30. Before the 2006 NBA Finals, Nowitzki probably would have been a top three pick. But Nowitzki's inability to develop a reliable post-up game has cost him a few spots. Still, the sweet-shooting 7-footer is a building-block player.

13. Portland Trail Blazers: Gilbert Arenas, PG, 26. Arenas will probably never be a pure point guard. But paired with a bigger ball handler in the backcourt -- saving Arenas from having to defend the point position -- Agent Zero could be an unstoppable offensive force. Assuming the knee is healthy, of course.

14. Golden State Warriors: Greg Oden, C, 20. OK, so Oden hasn't played a game yet. But a 7-foot, 250-pound center with superior defensive ability has to be considered a franchise player. Any offensive skills he develops -- and he will develop them -- are a bonus.

15. Atlanta Hawks: Tony Parker, PG, 26. With a deadly teardrop, an improving jump shot and a proven ability to lead a veteran team, Parker epitomizes a franchise point guard.

16. Philadelphia 76ers: Deron Williams, PG, 23. Big, strong, fast, good going to the basket and a lethal shooter. If Williams has any flaws, it's that at times he looks likes a shooting guard in a point guard's body.

17. Toronto Raptors: Paul Pierce, SF, 30. Pierce can get physical with smaller forwards and drive around bigger ones. A durable player (only one full season of fewer than 73 games), the 10-year veteran proved in the NBA Finals that his defense is underrated.

18. Washington Wizards: Andrew Bynum, C, 20. Bynum was blossoming in '07-08 (13.1 points, 10.2 rebounds) before his knee injury, and there is no reason to think that he won't continue to grow in his fourth year. With more development, Bynum could challenge Howard and Yao as the league's top centers in a few years.

19. Cleveland Cavaliers: Tracy McGrady, SG/SF, 29. Is McGrady a leader? No. Is he a franchise player? Debatable. But are there five better pure scorers in the game today? No way. And McGrady is a more complete player than many give him credit for.

20. Denver Nuggets: David West, PF, 27. West might be the most underrated 20-point scorer in the NBA. A dependable jump shooter, West will continue to grow as his inside game improves.

21. Dallas Mavericks: Carlos Boozer, PF, 26. Though slightly undersized (6-8) for his position, Boozer is a rebounding machine who can pick-and-pop as well as he can pick-and-roll.

22. Orlando Magic: Brandon Roy, SG, 23. Roy is Dwyane Wade Lite, all the way down to his curiously spelled middle name (Dawayne). Nicknamed "The Natural," Roy attacks the basket with reckless abandon and, at 6-6, can play both guard positions.

23. Utah Jazz: Manu Ginobili, SG, 30. How good is Ginobili? Just watch tape of the Spurs' sputtering offense while he limped through five games against the Lakers in the Western Conference finals. Ginobili is clutch -- he led the Spurs in fourth-quarter scoring this past season -- and a three-point threat.

24. Phoenix Suns: Steve Nash, PG, 34. With a lot of miles on his tires, Nash is bound to break down eventually. But even a mediocre team will get better with Nash at the helm. Surround the two-time MVP with young players and their growth is accelerated exponentially.

25. Houston Rockets: Richard Hamilton, SG, 30. A tireless worker with a physical game that belies his slight frame, Hamilton is still improving. Exhibit A: He shot 44 percent from three-point range in '07-08, up from 34.1 percent the previous season and 36.4 percent as a rookie. A veteran of two NBA Finals and six conference finals, Hamilton also knows what it takes to win.

26. San Antonio Spurs: Josh Smith, PF/SF, 22. Smith is a bit of a head case -- just ask Mike Woodson -- but his talent is undeniable. Molded correctly, the rangy, 6-9 forward could develop Garnett-type defensive skills.

27. New Orleans Hornets: Pau Gasol, PF, 27. Gasol will never be a defensive stopper -- or even provide much resistance -- but his diverse offensive repertoire will keep him among the elite big men for the duration of his career.

28. Los Angeles Lakers: Kevin Durant, SF/SG, 19. Is Durant simply a scorer? At this point in his career, yes. Will he develop into more than that? I think so. While Durant will never dominate the glass like he did in college (11.1 per game his freshman year), he will average 6-7 boards once his body fills out. And when he learns to read defenses better, his assist totals could rise to the same level.

29. Detroit Pistons: Andre Iguodala, SF, 24. He can score (19.9 this past season), rebound (5.4) and dish (4.8). An inconsistent jump shot and a perceived reluctance to accept the role of franchise player are all that is holding him back.

30. Boston Celtics: Michael Redd, SG, 28. Redd may not be worthy of his max contract, but the NBA's top sharpshooter (a subjective opinion) is still a certifiable weapon. No one spaces the floor better.

12 comentarios ¡AGREGA EL TUYO!
Opina o deja al menos tu saludo, se agradece

Richi dijo...

Me parece muy interesante esto.
Se puede apreciar "el orden" de los jugadores según la calidad (quien es mejor), teniendo en cuenta también otras características como la edad y el futuro que por lo tanto abarcarán en la liga. De ahí que sean los jugadores seleccionados para iniciar un nuevo proyecto.

El orden puede gustar o no, pero me parece muy correcto, en cada uno está explicado el por qué y deja lugar a pocas dudas; aunque siempre se puede objetar en algunos.


Como lo ven

dennis_mora91 dijo...

Pues ver a Tim Duncan tan lejos me parece un sacrilegio, vale que tenga 32 años, pero es que este draft se deberia pensar teniendo en cuenta que todos fueran con la edad a la que se presentaron y decidir que hacer en ese momento si todos estaban metidos en el ajo, es interesante el articlo pero para nada "ilustrativo" XD

Richi dijo...

Bueno, se parte desde ahora, actualmente, no de cuando se presentaron, sino Duncan sería el 1, para mi al menos, delante de Kobe incluso.

Lo que me ha sorprendido y no comparto es ver a Yao tan arriba, demasiado me parece visto lo visto. Ni que esté antes Kg que Duncan. Por lo demás hay cosas muy correctas, teniendo en cuenta capacidad del jugar con edad y otras características.


Lo he puesto ya que es otro draft, que del actual ya no quería repetirme pues se está hablando mucho

Saludos!

elkefaltaba dijo...

Tres cosas me han llamado mucho la atención:

1.Duncan muy alejado de lo que yo y muchos le pondríamos, es decir, nº1.

2.Josh Smith jugador franquicia, puede llegar a serlo, pero aún le queda mucho que comer para ello.

3.Greg Oden sin debutar ni nada lo meten ahí, la verdad es que lo que dicen de él en esa explicación tiene parte de razón, pero creo que no se debería, porque es un jugador que ni ha debutado con su equipo, es como meter a D-Rose (entiendase la comparación). Me ha llamado la atención que sin debutar esté en el top5 de centers...

Buen artículo has encontrado, interesante, pero quizás poco "ilustrativo" (by Dennis xD).

Bias dijo...

Esta wapo el artículo. Aunke difiero personalmente bastante en las posiciones. Para mí el número uno x ejemplo indiscutible sería D.Howard, pero se entiende ke es discutible.
Para gustos hay colores!!!!

andre_iguodala dijo...

Bueno no esta mal el analisis, aunque hay algunas cosas discutibles, como que Parker este el numero 15 y por delante de Deron, o que Arenas ande tan arriba. Brandon Roy yo lo veo tambien algo mas arriba.

Iguodala number one :D

theanswer dijo...

Esta bastante bien este articulo por cierto richi hemos pasado de cuartos y tras romper la maldicion hoy contra los rusos el dia 26 a rusia volvereis !!!!

Richi dijo...

El dia 26 a Rusia volvereis!!!
Jejeje, a ver si pasamos a la final, esperemos que sí. Hoy a verlo y a animar a tope.


Saludos cracks

rex dijo...

Hombre creo que cada uno tiene un criterio y que sería muy dificil que coincidiera 100%, yo por ejemplo en los 4 primeros no pongo peros, a partir de ahi discrepo bastante.

costalgaraldals dijo...

El orden de la lista se podria discutir, los que faltan y sobran...
Para mi el 1º pongo a Chris Paul.

BigBen dijo...

el nº14 de oden me parece un poco exagerado teniendo en cuenta que no ha debutado todavia y ya esta por delante de gente como boozer o gasol que estan sobradamente contrastados. posiblemente luego sea mejor, pero es que todavia no ha empezado.

kevin love dijo...

¿Yao Ming antes que Duncan? Con eso está todo dicho.