6/17/2005 Insider - 49 players for 30 slots

sunsfn

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Updated: May 17, 2005, 12:37 PM ET

Gilchrist, Robinson might not make first-round cut


Chad Ford

Suddenly, that David Stern age-limit thing isn't sounding like such a bad idea.



Saturday was the NBA deadline to declare for the draft. By Insider's unofficial count (the NBA will release the official list this week), 86 college underclassmen, high school seniors and under-22 international players declared for the draft. By the time the official list comes out, chances are the number will be even higher. Every year, there are at least one or two surprises on the list.



If 86 sounds like a lot, it's because it is. There are 60 spots available in the draft, and a big chunk of those will go to college seniors.



A number of players will pull out. Last year a record 94 underclassmen declared for the draft and a whopping 53 pulled out by the deadline in June (one week before the draft). That number probably will be smaller this year because just 40 underclassmen and high schoolers have preserved their college eligibility by not hiring agents. International players are free to withdraw even if they've hired an agent, increasing the total number of players who may withdraw to 62.

However, of that group of 62, only 19 are considered likely to stay in the draft. Do the math: Of the 86 early-entry players, about 43 are expected to withdraw from the draft, leaving an estimated 43 early-entry players in the draft. Someone isn't going to be happy.

Where do they all stand?

Today, Insider takes a look at each early entry and what his draft prospects are.



COLLEGE UNDERCLASSMEN (53 declared)

# = Declared for the draft, but hasn't signed with an agent Top 3
Marvin Williams, SF/PF, Fr., North Carolina [Draft range: 1-3]
Chris Paul, PG, So., Wake Forest [Draft range: 1-3]
Andrew Bogut, PF/C, So., Utah [Draft range: 1-3]


Lottery-Bound (4)
Deron Williams, PG, Jr., Illinois [Draft range: 4-10]
Raymond Felton, PG, Jr., North Carolina [Draft range: 5-12]
Chris Taft, PF, So., Pittsburgh [Draft range: 7-14]
Antoine Wright, SG, Jr., Texas A&M# [Draft range: 9-15]


Mid-to-Late First Round (8)
Sean May, PF/C, Jr., North Carolina [Draft range: 14-22]
Jarrett Jack, PG, Jr., Georgia Tech# [Draft range: 14-24]
Charlie Villanueva, SF/PF, So., UConn [Draft range: 15-25]
Rashad McCants, SG, Jr., North Carolina [Draft range: 17-23]
Randolph Morris, C, Fr., Kentucky# [Draft range: 18-27]
Kennedy Winston, SF, Jr., Alabama# [Draft range: 20-30]
Ike Diogu, PF, Jr., Arizona State# [Draft range: 21-35]
Francisco Garcia, SG/SF, Jr., Louisville [Draft range: 21-35]


First-Round Bubble Boys (7)
John Gilchrist, PG, Jr., Maryland [Draft range: 24-40]
Linas Kleiza, SF/PF, So., Missouri [Draft range: 26-40]
Nate Robinson, PG/SG, Jr., Washington [Draft range: 26-40]
Matt Walsh, SG/SF, Jr., Florida# [Draft range: 26-40]
Brandon Bass, PF, So., LSU [Draft range: 28-45]
Dee Brown, SG, Jr., Illinois# [Draft range: 29-45]
Deji Akindele, C, So., Chicago State# [Draft range: 29-45]


Second Round to Undrafted (31)
Alex Acker, SG, Jr., Pepperdine#
Kelenna Azubuike, SG, Jr., Kentucky
Sean Banks, SF, So., Memphis
Jose Juan Barea, PG, So., Northeastern#
Brandon Bowman, F, Jr., Georgetown#
Toney Douglas, G, Fr., Auburn#
Olu Famutimi, G/F, So., Arkansas#
Torin Francis, PF, Jr., Notre Dame#
Mike Hall, SF, Jr., George Washington#
Chris Hernandez, PG, Jr., Stanford#
Bryan Hopkins, PG, Jr., SMU#
Dwayne Jones, C, Jr., St. Joseph's#
Carl Krauser, PG, Jr., Pittsburgh#
Dennis Latimore, PF, Jr., Notre Dame
Darshan Luckey, SG, Jr., St. Francis#
Nana (Pops) Mensah-Bonsu, PF, Jr., George Washington
J.R. Morris, SG, Jr., Seton Hall
T.J. Parker, PG, Jr., Northwestern
Tim Parham, PF, Jr., Maryland-Eastern Shore#
Pierre Pierce, G, Jr., Iowa
Kevin Pittsnogle, PF, Jr., West Virginia#
Shavlik Randolph, F, Jr., Duke#
Anthony Roberson, PG, Jr., Florida#
Chris Rodgers, SG, Jr., Arizona#
Marcus Slaughter, SF, So., San Diego State#
Steven Smith, SF, Jr., LaSalle#
Tiras Wade, SG, Jr., Louisiana-Layfayette#
Von Wafer, G, So., Florida State#
James White, G/F, Cincinnati#
Eric Williams, PF, Jr., Wake Forest#
Bracey Wright, SG, Jr., Indiana




HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS (11 declared)
Lottery-Bound (1)
Gerald Green, SG, HS Sr., TX# [Draft range: 4-10]


Mid-to-Late First Round (4)
Martell Webster, SG, HS Sr., WA# [Draft range: 11-20]
Andrew Bynum, C, HS Sr., NJ# [Draft range: 10-20]
Andray Blatche, PF, HS Sr., NY [Draft range: 15-21]
Monta Ellis, PG/SG, HS Sr., MS [Draft range: 20-35]


First-Round Bubble Boys (1)
Louis Williams, SG, HS Senior, GA# [Draft range: 26-40]


Second Round to Undrafted (5)
Amir Johnson, PF, HS Sr., CA#
CJ Miles, SG, HS Sr., TX#
Brandon Rush, SG, HS Sr., NC#
Keith Brumbaugh, F, HS Sr., FL#
Martellus Bennett, F, HS Sr., Texas#




INTERNATIONAL UNDER-22 (22 declared)
Lottery-Bound (1)


Martynas Andriuskevicius, PF/C, 19 yrs, Lithuania [Draft range: 5-14]


Mid-to-Late First Round (8)
Nemanja Aleksandrov, SF/PF, 18 yrs, Serbia [Draft range: 10-18]
Johan Petro, C, 19 yrs, France [Draft range: 9-20]
Tiago Splitter, PF, 20 yrs, Brazil [Draft range: 9-20]
Marko Tomas, SG, 19 yrs, Croatia [Draft range: 12-23]
Yaroslav Korolev, SF, 18 yrs, Russia [Draft range: 16-22]
Rudy Fernandez, SG, 19 yrs, Spain [Draft range: 17-25]
Ersan Ilyasova, SF, 18 yrs, Turkey [Draft range: 18-27]
Peja Samardziski, C, 19 yrs, Macedonia [Draft range: 22-30]


First-Round Bubble Boys (3)
Mile Ilic, C, 21 yrs, Serbia [Draft range: 27-40]
Roko Ukic, PG, 21 yrs, Croatia [Draft range: 27-40]
Kosta Perovic, C, 20 yrs, Serbia [Draft range: 27-40]


Second Round to Undrafted (10)
Marcin Gortat, C, 21 yrs., Germany
Luka Bogdanovic, SF, 20 yrs, Serbia
Ivan Chiriaev, SF, 21 yrs., Russia
Paulius Jankunas, PF, 21 yrs., Lithuania
Marko Lekic, F, 20 yrs., Serbia
Erazem Lorberk, PF/C, 21 yrs, Slovenia
Miguel Marriaga, G/F, 21 yrs., Venezuela
Drago Pasalic, PF, 21 yrs, Croatia
Dusan Sakota, SF, 19 yrs, Greece
Marcus Vinicius, SF, 21 yrs, Brazil




THE NUMBERS DON'T ADD UP
If you've started doing the math, it's pretty clear that there are too many early-entry players.

Now we have to factor in the college seniors. Currently, it looks like this:

Lottery-Bound (1)


Danny Granger, SF, Sr., New Mexico [Draft range: 7-14]


Mid-to-Late First Round (4)
Hakim Warrick, PF, Sr., Syracuse [Draft range: 7-14]
Joey Graham, SF, Sr., Oklahoma State [Draft range: 7-14]
Wayne Simien, PF, Sr., Kansas [Draft range: 18-25]
Channing Frye, C, Sr., Arizona [Draft range: 19-30]


First-Round Bubble Boys (3)
Ronny Turiaf, PF, Sr., Gonzaga [Draft range: 25-40]
Julius Hodge, SG, Sr., North Carolina State [Draft range: 28-40]
David Lee, PF, Sr., Florida [Draft range: 29-40]


And we also need to take into account one 22-year-old draft-eligible international player:

Lottery-Bound (1)
Fran Vasquez, PF, 22 yrs, Spain [Draft range: 6-14]


Add all of those up, and here's what we have:

Lottery-Bound (11): College senior (1), college underclassmen (7), high school seniors (1), international-22 (1) and international underclassmen (1).

Mid-to-Late First Round (24): College seniors (4), college underclassmen (8), high school seniors (4) and international underclassmen (8)

Bubble First-Rounders (14): College seniors (3), college underclassmen (7), high school seniors (1) and international underclassmen (3)

That's 49 players for 30 first-round spots.

What does it mean?

Between buyout issues, the inability for some of those top prospects to actually work out for teams and the crowded nature of the draft, don't be surprised if a large number of the international players pull out.

I think Petro and Fernandez are the only two who are locks to stay in. Aleksandrov will stay in as long as he's a top-15 pick (which is pretty likely). Tomas also needs to go in the late lottery or mid-first round to afford his buyout in Croatia. Guys such as Andriuskevicius, Splitter, Korolev, Ilyasova, Samardziski, Ilic and Perovic are fishing for promises. Andriuskevicius and Splitter want something in the lottery. The others are looking for first-round guarantees. If they don't get them, they're probably returning to school.

The same should hold true with the high school kids. All five of the sub-first-rounders – plus Bynum (who seems to just be flirting with the draft right now) – probably will pull out.

As for the college guys, most of the top players are in for sure. Jack, Morris and Brown are the most likely to return to school if they don't get the assurances they want.


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I still say Diogu has too much buzz about him to go #21. But I hope they are right. Does anyone know how many teams are working him out as extensively as the Suns?
 

devilalum

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I keep thinking there has to be a player that is top 10 on the Suns draft board that will fall to the Suns because he fits well in our system but wouldn't necessarily fit that well in a lot of other teams systems.
 

George O'Brien

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asudevil83 said:
nbadraft.net has him (Ike) at 27

Mocks tend to get screwy right before players withdraw.

The key to reading mocks is to try to figure out their methodology. Some mocks simply rank players by overall talent and then just let the guys slot without any consideration to the team's style and needs. Other mocks do a hard needs analysis which ranks players by position and then allocates based on the top person in the needs area. Some mocks do a soft needs analysis, where they assign two or three needs and take the top ranked player that meets one of those three needs. And some mocks seem to use a dart board, but we'll pass on that. :rolleyes:

When you look at how mocks slot Ike, it becomes easy to determine how they work. Ike is potentially the best the pure PF in the draft and the first team that has PF as top need is New Jersey. Almost half the mocks have him going to New Jersey without any rumors that they are super high on him.

Is he a good fit for the Nets? Currently the Nets start Jason Collins at center and Nenad Krstic at PF. Krytic showed some offensive punch in the first round, where he averaged 18.3 ppg on 56.3% shooting and 7.5 rpg in 38.5 minutes. His overall season average was less impressive,

Nenad Krstic
New Jersey Nets
Position: C
Height: 7-0 Weight: 240
From : Serbia-Montenegro
Player file | Team stats

2004-05 Statistics
PPG 10.0
RPG 5.3
APG 1.0
SPG .43
BPG .84
FG% .493
FT% .725
3P% .000
MPG 26.2

Where the Nets have the biggest need is at center. Jason Collins is at best pretty average:

Jason Collins
New Jersey Nets
Position: F-C
Height: 7-0 Weight: 255
College : Stanford '01
Player file | Team stats

2004-05 Statistics
PPG 6.4
RPG 6.1
APG 1.3
SPG .89
BPG .89
FG% .412
FT% .656
3P% .333
MPG 31.8

Collins .201 rebounders per minute is even worse than Steven Hunter and 41.2% shooting for a center is flat out horrible.

The Nets "need" an upgrade at center even more than at PF. I can't really see Ike and Krstic in the lineup together. But we'll see, maybe the Nets will make some other personnel changes.
 

Joe Mama

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George O'Brien said:
The Nets "need" an upgrade at center even more than at PF. I can't really see Ike and Krstic in the lineup together. But we'll see, maybe the Nets will make some other personnel changes.

Kristic would just slide over to center with Ike at power forward. There's no reason to think they wouldn't be just fine together. Kristic is significantly better than those season averages would indicate. He's more like the guy we saw in the playoffs.

Joe
 

Joe Mama

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thegrahamcrackr said:
That makes no sense. Why would they drop him 8 spots when he has been getting great reviews?

I actually have limited faith in most of these mock drafts, but I have little to no faith in the NBADraft.net. This is the same web site that was reporting that the Phoenix Suns had given Ike a promise almost 2 weeks ago.

Joe Mama
 

George O'Brien

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Joe Mama said:
I actually have limited faith in most of these mock drafts, but I have little to no faith in the NBADraft.net. This is the same web site that was reporting that the Phoenix Suns had given Ike a promise almost 2 weeks ago.

Joe Mama

nbadraft.net does seen to be less useful than in past years. I know they'd like use to buy their premium package, but the stuff they show does not convince me it is worth it.
 
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