Imo Cam Whitmore has the ceiling to be as good as Jaylen Brown and GG Jackson ceiling could be Jayson Tatum lite but he is more boom or bust forsure. Big athletic wings who can shoot and self create are one of the most coveted archetypes of players in the league so I think you are a bit too low on both
I think when a player is already 22, 23 or 24 on draft night it pretty much automatically eliminates them from having superstar upside these days and often makes it much harder to even be All-Stars. Even 20 or 21 years old instead of 22 is just way different it seems. Some guys will break the trend but it’s getting more and more rare to see super old prospects breakout in a huge way Pascal Siakam is an outlier (and Bane but he hasn’t been an All-Star yet)
@@Jajsnsjsn Lol Jimmy, DWade and Tim were all 21 on draft night same with Lillard and Brunson… and I’m mostly talking about last several years and going forward not 90s or before drafts completely different eras… just something about already being 22 or older on the night of the draft seemingly makes players ceilings lower
@@bkelly625 That point is fair. The majority of NBA All-Stars were 20 or younger on opening night. However, I don’t like the idea that an older prospect has automatically hit their ceiling early on. We’ve seen players like Mikal Bridges, Jalen Brunson, Norman Powell, and Derrick White, etc. make significant strides in their careers since joining the league, outperforming younger players drafted ahead of them. I see the argument, but I think we sometimes overthink it.
@@ReAIex17 In terms of winning impact I agree and in most classes he’d be top 5 but I just strongly believe this is one of the most talented classes in recent memory and his ceiling is lower than all the players I have ahead. We will see though it’s too early to really do this seriously
Imo Cam Whitmore has the ceiling to be as good as Jaylen Brown and GG Jackson ceiling could be Jayson Tatum lite but he is more boom or bust forsure. Big athletic wings who can shoot and self create are one of the most coveted archetypes of players in the league so I think you are a bit too low on both
LMAAAAOOOOO you are terrible at this
@@grapeape1965lmao i think mixing up their play style with their ceiling
Tatum is still arguably worse than brown. I wouldnt personally argue it, but jayson-tatum lite is a worse player than brown unequivocally.
The obsession with bilal needs to be studied
Right
5:30 kai jones on the hornets 🤣 #GOATLIFE
Love your vids man! Keep up the great work!
GG Jackson is litteraly better than Cam Whitemore and you have him going outside the lottery
Bilal underrated
I don’t understand this idea that older prospects don’t have high ceilings. I feel like if you put in the work, you’ll get to where you want to be.
I think when a player is already 22, 23 or 24 on draft night it pretty much automatically eliminates them from having superstar upside these days and often makes it much harder to even be All-Stars. Even 20 or 21 years old instead of 22 is just way different it seems. Some guys will break the trend but it’s getting more and more rare to see super old prospects breakout in a huge way Pascal Siakam is an outlier (and Bane but he hasn’t been an All-Star yet)
@@bkelly625have you ever heard of jimmy butter or Tim Duncan or d wade they would argue with that statement
@@Jajsnsjsn Lol Jimmy, DWade and Tim were all 21 on draft night same with Lillard and Brunson… and I’m mostly talking about last several years and going forward not 90s or before drafts completely different eras… just something about already being 22 or older on the night of the draft seemingly makes players ceilings lower
@@bkelly625 That point is fair. The majority of NBA All-Stars were 20 or younger on opening night. However, I don’t like the idea that an older prospect has automatically hit their ceiling early on. We’ve seen players like Mikal Bridges, Jalen Brunson, Norman Powell, and Derrick White, etc. make significant strides in their careers since joining the league, outperforming younger players drafted ahead of them. I see the argument, but I think we sometimes overthink it.
@@bkelly625 jjj was 22 for most of his rookie year so was jimmy I don’t see why draft age matters when 4 years of college is 4 years of college.
GG and Ausar are too low, the both go in the lottery for sure
I disagree with 3, I think Portland would take Amen if they could do it again. Houston would then take Scoot
2023 NBA ReDraft (age/long term upside matters, ie Brogdon better early career than Jaylen Brown but not close now)
1. Spurs- Victor Wembanyama-1aa
2. Hornets- Brandon Miller-1a
3. Blazers- Cam Whitmore-1a
4. Rockets- Amen Thompson-1a
5. Pistons- GG Jackson-1a
6. Magic- Scoot Henderson-1a
7. Pacers- Bilal Coulibaly-1b
8. Wizards- Ausar Thompson-1b
9. Jazz- Dereck Lively II-1b
10. Mavs- Brandin Podziemski-1b
11. Magic- Cason Wallace-1b
12. Thunder- Taylor Hendricks-1c
13. Raptors- Keyonte George-1c
14. Pelicans- Anthony Black-1c
15. Hawks- Jarace Walker-2a
16. Jazz- Jaime Jaquez Jr. -2a
17. Lakers- Gradey Dick-2b
18. Heat- Trayce Jackson-Davis-2b
19. Warriors- Noah Clowney-2b
20. Rockets- Ben Sheppard-2b
Dereck Lively was legit the second best rookie last season...
@@ReAIex17 In terms of winning impact I agree and in most classes he’d be top 5 but I just strongly believe this is one of the most talented classes in recent memory and his ceiling is lower than all the players I have ahead. We will see though it’s too early to really do this seriously
@@ReAIex17 2nd best was Miller, then Amen and then Lively
Bro just forgot ab ausar Thompson lol
Not taking bilal over ausar or cam whitmore
Ausar Thompson seems really low
love the notepad 😆
GG Jackson at 3
toumani should move up, early second round at the latest
Just really a Henderson fan huh
ausar is for sure top 10
pistons fans still want ausar
Really not fair to redraft this soon with so many young guards not ready to pop for another year or two.
there will be another redraft for sure 😂