Seth Davis posts pre-draft evaluations of top 50 NBA prospects on The Athletic this morning

Submitted by mGrowOld on June 17th, 2019 at 12:28 PM

For those of you who dont follow him every year Seth Davis posts evaluations of the top 50 NBA draft prospects via "Finch".  Finch is an anonymous amalgam of 6 NBA scouts and 6 different NBA front office executives all rolled up into one.   Let's just say Finch is not a big fan of the three Michigan players leaving early this year to say the least.

Ignas Brazdeikis, 6-7 forward, Michigan, 20. “I’m not a huge fan. He measured smaller than I thought. He’s not all that athletic. I don’t think he can guard a 4, and right now doesn’t have the ability to play the 3. I don’t like drafting Michigan players because I think John Beilein takes average players and makes them look terrific. His guys get drafted high but don’t do much in our league. Lateral quickness is a question. He was terrific the first month of the season, but I don’t know what happened to him. He did not shoot the ball well in the workout I saw. What does he do to really stand out on an NBA floor? He’s a streaky shooter but not a bad one.”

Charles Matthews, 6-6 guard, Michigan, 22. “Breaks my heart that the kid just tore his ACL. He was borderline before the injury. Now I can’t imagine who would draft him. I don’t see anything there. If you’re a wing in our league you have to be able to shoot, and he doesn’t have that yet. He’s more of a two-way guy who you develop. When you don’t improve your jumper after playing for Beilein, that’s a troubling sign. He’s going to have to make it defensively.”

Jordan Poole, 6-5 guard, Michigan, 19. “He should have stayed in school. Doesn’t handle the ball in terms of being to attack off the dribble. He’s going to have to take the long route to the NBA, probably through the G League. Not a fan. Good size but not a great athlete. I’m not convinced he loves basketball. Smooth as heck. Can really pass it. I think he can be a point guard if he gets stronger. Needs to get better as a defender but he’s good. He’s smaller than I thought, really lean and thin. Toughness is his biggest question. I question his decision-making. I thought he was good at times, but at other times I thought Michigan lost games because he was a train wreck.”

jonnyknox

June 17th, 2019 at 1:23 PM ^

That seems a little harsh to say that he was a train wreck.  They certainly didn't lose many games during the 2 years Jordan played.  But overall the evaluations are fair. 

You could make the argument that all 3 should have stayed and there will be a drop off next year without them.

 

Champeen

June 17th, 2019 at 1:00 PM ^

Pooles assessment is definitely the furthest off, but still pretty damn good.  These are overall very good assessments and i would agree with pretty much all of it except a little of Pooles.

Best pro player on the team last year, will be the star of this years team.  Livers. He is going to explode, and we damn well need him to.

Not to thread-jack, but the 2 things im most looking forward to is Howards development of Johns and Castleton.  Teske is what he is at this point.  But Johns and Castleton have potential to both be stars with the right guidance and development.

Gentleman Squirrels

June 17th, 2019 at 1:21 PM ^

I’m also looking forward to Castleton and Nunez post Camp Sanderson. Nunez has the shooting ability to step in for Poole, but he needs to get stronger. Totally agree with Castletons development under Howard. If he gets stronger as well, we could see another Mo Wagner type big on the team.

Larry Appleton

June 17th, 2019 at 12:38 PM ^

And this is why Beilein left in large part. 

25 years ago, you'd have to be a top-half of the first round prospect to leave school early. 

Then it became: "Probably first-round?  I'm going!"

Then it became: "Probably drafted?  I'm going!"

Now, you can have every scout in the universe telling you that you won't get drafted and it's: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 

OwenGoBlue

June 17th, 2019 at 12:52 PM ^

The NBA revenue boom and draft salary slots have it where if you stick in the league the 2nd round/UDFA route usually gets you paid more over the first 5 years than the non-lottery first guys who are team controlled for longer. 

Lots of guys obviously don't stick so it's a risk but kind of a messed up incentive structure. No coincidence they set and break records for underclass entries just about every year. 

Tacopants

June 17th, 2019 at 7:31 PM ^

That "next best" level of player can usually get paid pretty well overseas. Euroleague contracts are something like $100K a year. Fringe NBA prospects can get paid pretty well.

 

Of course i'd imagine the median 10 year pay rate there is significantly less than the median BBA from Ross, but it is their choice to make.

cletus318

June 17th, 2019 at 1:09 PM ^

The surge in TV money has made it to the point where even most second-round picks and undrafted guys are assured of getting at least two guaranteed years at over a million per year. If you hit, you can get to some fairly big money pretty quickly. For example, undrafted Fred Van Vleet had a higher salary this year than Ben Simmons, the top overall pick in the same draft. Even money overseas has grown at a pretty rapid pace. It's not nearly the risk it once was.

Navy Wolverine

June 17th, 2019 at 5:13 PM ^

NBA salaries have grown at a rapid rate providing plenty of incentive for a borderline player to leave. For example, the 200th highest played player in the NBA (Ben McLemore) makes $5.5 Million per year. For being the 7th best player on his team. The 300th highest paid (Tyus Jones) even made $2.4M as a bench warmer.

blueandmaizeballs

June 17th, 2019 at 8:03 PM ^

Ben McLemore is still in the league and no way is he the 7th best player on his team.  Tyus Jones had a bigger impact on n his team the Ben did.  Iggy should have stayed and Charles was going no matter what Poole need to check his ego or whoever advised him to go pro needs to stay out of his ear. He needed at least one more year if not two to develop and if he did turn into a point guard he would have been drafted higher because his size would have been good for a PG.  

TrueBlue2003

June 17th, 2019 at 6:27 PM ^

This wasn't normal under Beilein and isn't normal amongst other college players.  Poole and Iggy just really, really wanted to leave.  They are exceptions to any rules and expecting guys to leave like they did in the future would have been very stupid of Beilein. 

Unfortunately, the professional future of John Beilein is probably short. He understandably said, look I have a couple more years, I don't have as good a chance at a title as I thought I would have, I'm going to try the one other thing I haven't accomplished: coach at the highest level.

goblue12820

June 17th, 2019 at 12:45 PM ^

Yikes. Poole eval is brutal. 

It's pretty obvious most of these guys really have no interest in being part of NCAA basketball at this point, and I don't blame them. 

OwenGoBlue

June 17th, 2019 at 12:46 PM ^

I don't put much stock in mocks outside of legit insiders projecting early picks but saw a tweet from this morning looking at the latest 2-round mocks FWIW

Went through 8 updated mock drafts that include 2 rounds:

Poole: Drafted in 6 of 8. Highest 42, Avg (If picked): 50.3

Iggy: Drafted in 5 of 8. Highest 42, Avg (If Picked): 50.4

Matthews: Drafted in 1 of 8, Bleacher Report had him at 47

StephenRKass

June 17th, 2019 at 12:47 PM ^

Seems very accurate to me. Now obviously for selfish reasons, I wish they all had stayed at Michigan. From my perspective, when someone is clearly a lottery pick, you go to the NBA. But none of these were obvious top 10, even top 20 picks. Which leads to my question:  given how these guys are viewed, what were they thinking? What kind of advice were they getting? I really don't understand. And yes, I completely understand Beilein being fed up with this and moving on.

Macenblu

June 17th, 2019 at 1:05 PM ^

Totally agree, and I think the majority of us do, regarding Iggy and Poole.  Matthews was understandable however.  He has already graduated and recognizes he's not likely to improve his draft stock with another year of college ball.  I can't blame him at all for wanting to get on with the next phase of his life, whatever that may be.

Maize N' Ute

June 17th, 2019 at 12:51 PM ^

Yeah, that ain't good.  I can't say I disagree with him either.

Poole and Iggy should have stayed.  Is there a chance either of them could still back out and return?

MGoChippewa

June 17th, 2019 at 2:17 PM ^

I'm with you there. A lot of Pistons fans have made the lazy comparison to Stanley Johnson, but Langford's floor is way higher since he's a better ball handler and finisher. When you add in that his jumper was likely affected by the torn hand ligament, I think he's their best shot at drafting an all star with the 15th pick. 

SoIWontGetFined

June 17th, 2019 at 2:52 PM ^

Langford is intriguing and I wouldn't hate it if we took him but I really worry about his shot.  Didn't shoot that well on the circuit before he hurt his hand.  I'm leaning toward Alexander-Walker.  Doesn't have the upside of a Langford or Porter but I like his game a lot.  Shot is there, could run a little point and plays decent D.  Not a freak athlete but hoops IQ is high.  Could be a hidden gem and if not the floor is still fairly high.