The Right Time with Bomani Jones - Tom Haberstroh on Cooper Flagg Questions, Pelicans Shocking Trade, NBA Nepotism | 6.27
Episode Date: June 27, 2025On today's episode of The Right Time, Bomani Jones is joined by Tom Haberstroh of Yahoo Sports to discuss the 2025 NBA Draft. The show begins with Tom assessing Cooper Flagg as a prospect (1:54) and ...why he compares to Kevin Garnett (4:02). They move onto criticizing the New Orleans Pelicans trade (15:30), if "Chinese Jokic" could dominate the NBA (23:56) and UNC's struggles with sending impact players to the league (28:05). After the break, Tom shares why Wake Forest actually has the highest hit rate for quality NBA talent (35:45) and why selecting a player whose dad played in the NBA often works out (40:33). Bo and Tom round out the show by ridiculing the younger generation of basketball players for lacking personality (52:54) and if we collectively forgot to hate on Cooper Flagg for going to Duke. (1:01:46) . . . Subscribe to Supercast for Ad-Free Episodes: https://righttime.supercast.com/ Subscribe to The Right Time with Bomani Jones on Spotify, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts and follow the show on Instagram, Twitter, and Tik Tok for all the best moments from the show. Download Full Podcast Here: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6N7fDvgNz2EPDIOm49aj7M?si=FCb5EzTyTYuIy9-fWs4rQA&nd=1&utm_source=hoobe&utm_medium=social Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-right-time-with-bomani-jones/id982639043?utm_source=hoobe&utm_medium=social Follow The Right Time with Bomani Jones on Social Media: http://lnk.to/therighttime Support the Show: Go to zbiotics.com/BOMANI to learn more and get 15% off your first order when you use BOMANI at checkout. Download Cash App Today: https://capl.onelink.me/vFut/icdnkphp #CashAppPod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the right time, a wave original.
My name is Beaumani Jones.
Thanks for listening wherever you get your podcast.
Thanks for watching us on YouTube.
Subscribe, like, rate us, review us, give us five stars.
You only give us four stars.
I'm inclined to believe you are a hater.
It is Tom Havistro Friday.
Tom Haverstrow of Tom Definder.com.
What's going on, sir?
What's happening, Bumani?
Good to be here.
All right, man.
We got a lot going on.
Tom is one of our guests who also likes to dabble in producing his own shit.
So he sent us a couple of articles that are actually interesting and worth discussing.
Therefore, we will do it.
I got to put you on the list.
You're on there with Lefko, who shows up with his own questions and Taylor Rooks,
who's never found an interview of her that she could not turn into an interview of you.
That's high territory that you're in there.
Is that a backhanded compliment?
Is that I'm producing your show?
No, no, no, it is not.
No, here's the thing.
It would be backhanded if the stuff wasn't good.
Instead, it's you earning your keep.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, why make this difficult when I have?
Because, you know, normally you'll hit a guest up.
Is there anything you like to talk about?
You're just like, why wait?
And it was good stuff.
Yeah.
That story I wrote for Yahoo and we'll get into it later.
I think it has a lot of implications, not just in sports, but in economics and in all sorts of
areas.
And I feel like this is kind of in our wheelhouse.
just talking from the framework of what works and what doesn't and ROI on hires and all this stuff.
So I can't wait to talk about that with you.
But man, last night's NBA draft, I know people didn't realize like a lot of these names here,
but there's so many funny things that happen in last night's draft that I can't wait to talk about with you.
So first thing, where are you on Cooper Flagg?
because what keeps me in it with Flag is the way that people talked about him from the Olympics in
in 2024 and the way they said he really held his own in those practices. I see a very good player
in college. I don't see the player that I hear people talk about. Like he does not jump off the
screen to me in that way, but everybody else seems to see it. And if you tell me that he did it
against the best, now, you know, you got me. So where are you? I love this kid. And I say kid,
because he's 18 years old
and he's going to be 18 years old
when he starts his NBA career
and debuts for the Dallas Mavericks.
You have to understand
this guy should be coming out of high school.
He's going to be debuting as an 18 year old
a year and a half younger
than what KG was when he came out a high school.
So like you have to kind of start re-engineering
Cooper Flagg as a prospect
and remember that he classed up
so that he could get into this draft class
and he should be coming out.
of high school. So first things first, he started at Duke as a 17 year old. Okay. So when you're the best
college basketball player, when you started as a 17 year old, you're special. Okay. And then there isn't
really a weakness in his game, right? People thought, oh, that jumper, I'm not so sure about that jumper.
He was one of the best three-point shooters in America in the second half of last season. He's got
handle. He's got toughness. He plays defense. He can block shots. He can guard on the perimeter.
He's a great attacker downhill. I went to one of his games.
they're playing Pitt
and they showed these highlights
over and over last night in the draft
and Jay Billis was like
dude that that game there was highlights all over the place
I was there for that because I was doing this charity event
it was like you could feel this guy
like you could feel him from the stands
and I know Cameron Indoor is a little
matchbox there but you could feel his presence
every time he jumped from the floor
the gym kind of bounced because he plays
with that kind of power and he was by far
the best player on the floor
in that game and he dunked all over one of those pit bid guys in the fast break and he's just
fearless. I mentioned KG earlier. I think if he hits his ceiling, he's KG. He hits his ceiling,
he's KG. If he's the big ticket, this guy's the big login, like that's this generation's KG
if he hits his highs because I think he's got the full skill set like KG does, the competitiveness,
the two-way play, the ability to play point forward. And I just think he is the real deal.
Alice, though, I don't love the fit. The expectations for him there. And it just doesn't feel like the right situation for him. But I love him as a prospect.
All right. So the thing for me is KG was perhaps at a point the best defensive player in the NBA.
Consumid crazy person leader, right? Like it works in its own absolutely insane way. The counterpoint on KG or where we started hitting KG with some demerits. Again, a guy who was up there with, you know,
potentially the best player in the NBA at a point. Also, game seven against Sacramento and 04,
notwithstanding, not the dude that you want to bring it home with the ball at the end. And I think
that people look at Flag as a guy that you want to be that guy who can do that. Like,
is that something that you can see for him? Yeah, yeah. It wasn't a good look at the end of the
game in the Final Four there to end his college career. When he fell down again, because he seemed to
keep falling down. That's the third time he fell down. Well, he was,
wearing Nike's, right? And he's a new balance guy. So maybe if you make that switch at the next level,
we'll fix that problem. I think he's great. In this season, like he is not, his advanced stats are
off the charts as a 17 year old coming in and now an 18 year old. You just don't see that from a guy
that young. And so when you're projecting him in four years, remember KG is rookie season when he was
playing with Googs and Terry Porter, I got, I work with Terry Porter, so I got to ask TP what it was
like to be there with a rookie KG. Took KG a couple years before he became an all-star this rookie year.
I think he averaged like 10 and 4. I think the expectations for Cooper Flag right away is a
lot higher than that. I would pick him as the early favorite for rookie of the year, but there's a lot
of expectations on him. Like, I think in five years, he's going to be 23 years old. We're probably
going to be able to evaluate this pick or how good he is in like eight years because that's how young he is.
I think that Cooper flag, from what everyone says, is the best competitor, the leader,
everything that you want from a young player.
And that select practice that he had at Team USA, he wasn't scared at all.
Like you watch him out on the floor and he was going at dudes.
So I really, I was expecting him to be a little shy around those.
I mean, this is, this is LeBron.
This is Steph.
This is KD.
These are the greats of the greats, right?
Still at the peak of their powers.
And he held his own, more than held his own.
Who was the last number one pick to go to a good team?
Like, Tim Duncan is the last one that I can think of off the top of my head.
And yes, I know the Spurs were bad and that's what helped them get Duncan.
But that was because David Robinson was hurt.
Like as soon as David Robinson showed back up, they were a good team.
I want to say this is the, the Mavericks are the best team to land the number one overall pick since Duncan.
Like in terms of record, it might even be record wise better than Duncan because that's first team worse.
Because they were terrible that year before in record-wise because Robinson got hurt.
I want to say, if not the last 30 years, I think it might be the number one, number one pick,
the best record going because they were 39 and 43, the Mavericks were, and they landed the number one overall pick.
And unless you traded the number one pick or traded a pick that became the number one pick and it jumped,
it's very hard to have a team that's basically 500 win the lottery.
So he's coming into a situation with AD.
I think he's going to be playing a lot at the three,
considering that Nico Harrison has always talked about defense wins championships.
And he's basically over a barrel with Daniel Gaffer and Derek lively and AD.
They want to build this big team.
So Cooper Flagg is going from a lot of times playing at the four last season.
And he's going to be six, nine, playing at the three position.
He's going to be tested a lot of nights because the NBA is going smaller.
And this Mavericks team is getting bigger.
So that's going to be a real test for him.
but ultimately, we're not going to be evaluating Cooper Flag this upcoming season.
But I think Jason Kidd and the expectations and Miko Harrison giving Kyrie Irving a three-year,
$120 million extension, the expectations are win right away.
And he's a winner.
We know that.
But for an 18-year-old coming to the NBA, trying to fill Luca Dodges' shoes,
that is some expectation that we have not put on a lot of number one overall picks.
Now, let me tell you this.
Talking a little later in the draft.
I think you may know this about me, but I am a firm supporter of the abolition of all
drafts. I think particularly in the face of salary caps, they were unnecessary.
Give teams salary slots that allowed them to dish out more money some more than others
if you want to retain the redistributive qualities of it.
But in the end, I don't think the draft is necessary.
I think it keeps wages down, but it's also now a television show, right?
and at the same time, if we are going to have it, I love watching guys who decide that they're going to try to manipulate where it is that they want to go through various techniques of not working out for people, acting a donkey when you go to the place, right?
You think you can make it work the way you want it to work.
Okay. At the same time, I also love and appreciate somebody that's like, yeah, nice try, buddy, you're coming with us.
And that is what happened here with the curious case of Ace Bailey that I talked to, Lefco about on Wednesday.
But, you know, on what head, it's hilarious that this dude was trying to get himself to go to the Wizards.
Like that was the plan on purpose is that you wanted to go to the Wizards.
Who in the, what, what's the logic here?
Who's it?
Because it's close to home?
What advice is it that you're receiving that's like, I want to go to the Wizards?
But instead, Danny Ains was like, nice try, buddy.
Welcome to Utah.
Yeah.
And that was the other one.
Like Ace Bailey and then Colm Murray Boyles was not too happy when the Raptors picked him.
And he dropped a four-letter word right when he got drafted.
He will be.
Right.
Don't you worry.
Don't you worry.
He will be okay.
He will find a way to enjoy Toronto one way or another.
He will figure it out.
He'll be okay.
So he needs to talk to some of his agents, some of his people around him about what it's like to be an NBA player in Toronto.
He'll be okay.
Salt Lake City.
look, Will Hardy just got an extension, right? He just went through, like, in Shawshank Redemption
when Tim Robbins is coming out of the sewer and he's just looking up and he got his extension.
Because a lot of people around the league, they're afraid to take that job. They're afraid to
take that rebuilding job because as soon as you start getting good, see ya. Right. And so Will Hardy got
the extension. So he came out the other side and he's got his deal. And now it looks like,
all right, we're going to take Ace Bailey and we're going to shoot for a huge swing.
They're going to take a huge home run swing in Ace Bailey because you saw what he did last year.
He was a top five pick and he was on a losing Rutgers team with Dylan Harper as a star teammate.
So this guy has not shown that he can be a winner at the collegiate level and it's going to be a while.
He is like a mold of clay.
This dude, Ace Bailey looks like he should be a lot better in terms of impact than he showed last season.
And so it's going to be a few years before I think he can start to deliver on his promise as being like this Tracy McGrady prototype, a Rudy Gay, just a really tall score bucket getter in the midrange.
The thing about the Utah Jazz, though, Bumani, is they are one of these Missoula ball teams.
They love taking threes and they hate the midrange.
There was a lot of games this season in which they didn't make a basket in the midrange area.
that never would have ever happened five years ago.
And I know we saw the Indiana Pacers and the Oklahoma City Thunder live in the mid-range
a little bit and take that in that dead zone, that analytics and a lot of Sabre metrics folks,
MIT Sloan analytics folks, say, hey, that is not a high percentage shot.
Only a few players can take that shot.
Ace Bailey has not shown that he is that guy yet.
And Will Hardy is a big believer in taking those shots behind the three-point line.
So those things that Ace Bailey is really liking the,
mid-range, those fadeaway jumpers on the baseline, he's going to have to
wean that out of his system if he wants to play in this system.
What surprised me is that the people who have the advanced numbers, the predictive advanced
metrics about college players, and Bailey seems to flunk those all the way across the board.
That was the part that surprised me was somebody taking him that high.
And I know, I guess the young age is now the one who is making a lot of these decisions
there in Utah.
but this felt like the kind of pick the old age would make in the sense that
Danny Aange is a basketball player with a tendency to look at guys and think about
well what would I do if I had to guard that guy?
And Ais Bailey strikes me as a sort of dude that players look at and are like, oh man,
I can't do nothing with this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like Damar de Rosen is somewhere in the realm of what you would want Ace Bailey to develop
into, right?
Guy who just gets to his spots and he's going to be a terror to guard because he's
just a great shooter, tough shot maker. Same thing with Ace Bailey. A thing that statistically is a
huge red flag for him is he has a really low assist rate and a really low steel rate. Steel rate,
Beaumani is this secret sauce that if you look at steel rate in college hoops or steel rate for any
level going into the NBA, it has a crazy good predictor of your NBA success. Like if you can get
steals defensively, you know, the numbers say that that is a huge.
huge harbinger for success at the next level. And you can probably like wrap your mind around
why that might be the case. If you're getting a lot of steals, A, you try hard defensively.
You're not sleeping on defense. Two, you have this great like kind of sense of the game,
basketball IQ about where the pass is going to go. And you have this ability to predict where
the, the offense is going. And thirdly, like you're physical. Like a lot of guys who want to
make it at the next level, they got to play bigger. They got to play longer. They use their wingspan in
ways that they can use to get turnovers. And steal rate is not one of his high qualities. Just
1.4 steals every 36 minutes. And that's something that BJ Edgecombe does really well and why
I think Philadelphia really liked him. And the other side is 1.1, sorry, 1.4 assists and 1.1
steals at the college level. So 1.4 assists every 36 minutes for Ace Bailey. Yikes. Big yikes if you want to
play at the next level. Now the counterpoint to that is,
Gilbert Reidus's point about his own son is, we'll worry about passing later.
Like, it feels like Ace Bailey has been told, just put them, just, just get these shots up, right?
Like, this is what you hear for.
Now, I try not to get too draft nerdy in this because I think people generally don't care.
And I do think that the super draft nerds get a little bit too caught up in stuff like the pick swaps, the protections, so forth and so on.
But in a world where this exists, the New Orleans Pelicans, who Joe Dumars is now,
in charge. Love Joe Dumars.
Joe Dumas has a championship. He's coached very good teams. I mean, it has been the GM for some very
good teams. They moved up 10 spots in the draft with their second first round pick from the
23rd pick to the 13th pick. And they traded away their first round pick next year.
But in a way that is very uncommon in NBA trades, unprotected, which is to say no matter
where that pick lands, the Pelicans have no control over their pick. So if the Pelicans are not
doing well next season and decide they're going to be.
want to go young and get a bad record as a result it doesn't matter they don't get the picks all you guys
that really do this do exactly what top haberstone just did right there and put his hand in his head
and leaned back and was bad frustrated by the eye that did they did it now i'm going to hear your take on
it and then i'm going to throw something out there that i don't know if you have heard you go first okay
i feel like david stern tried to rise from the grave and block this trade just like he did way back
with chris paula leakers like david stern would never have
of let this happen because when you're looking at the trade, the key here is that it is a swap.
They can actually swap with the Milwaukee Bucks.
It's going to be the best pick between the Pelicans and the Bucks next year, Bumani.
So if the Bucks decide, hey, we're going to blow it up, we're going in a different direction.
Janus, we're trading Janus.
That Milwaukee Bucks pick with no Damian Lillard next season could be extremely valuable.
And so even if it's New Orleans unprotected, I'd be like, man, that's a tough way to move up 10 spots.
But they actually doubled their odds.
The Atlanta Hawks doubled their odds of having a great pick by having the ability to have the most favorable pick between the Pelicans and the Bucks.
So it's not just that they got an unprotected pick.
It's that they got the ability to exchange that if the Bucks somehow, something happens to Janus,
something happens with Milwaukee, and they go, amen.
I know that New Orleans pick could be 10, but that bucks pick just won the lottery.
We're going to take that.
So it's basically they traded up 10 spots for two hacks at the lottery, potentially
winning the lottery.
I think that they think, they being the Pelicans, that they got a super duper steal with,
I think it was Derek Queen that they took.
Yeah, Derek Queen from Maryland.
Yep.
Okay.
Have you seen the quote to Kevin Willard, who now coaches.
that Villanova but coached at Maryland last year had about Derek Queen.
What's the quote?
He said that he believed, this is wild.
He said that he believed that if Derek Queen were white and from Europe,
that he would be the number one overall picking the draft.
Okay.
Now, I feel like it's one thing to big up your guy,
you must really, really, really believe what you're saying or who you've got
if you say something like this.
Is this a possibility?
Because Dumar said after the draft, he's just like, look, man,
if you see the guy and you want the guy, you go get the guy.
He was like, we're taking two picks in this draft, right?
And I agree with you.
You have the possibility of moving way up next year and all that stuff.
But he seems super duper sold on who the guy is that they have.
And if you feel sold on him and, you know, the part that you can't predict,
if you think Zion Williams is going to give you 70 games this year,
then your pick is not going to be bad.
right like maybe that's what it is i would be very curious to know if after the draft they told
dumars about what you said about it actually being two chances and he was like damn why ain't y'all
tell me i ain't know that hey come on man like i didn't realize the bucks was in there too like that
you said it was ours that might be like the most valuable 2026 pick because of that bucks factors
because we don't know like that yonis ended acupun even though he has not put on the trade block
he certainly hasn't said i'm a milwaukee buck for life so you can talk
yourself into that he's not going to be put on the trade block, but the opposite is also true,
that it has been a long enough time for Janice and Kippo to get out here and be like,
hey, I know all the rumors, but I, I'm going to be a Wisconsinite forward life. I'm here for
the long haul. He has not done that. So until that happens, maybe, maybe this is okay. But
remember, it gets worse, Pomani. They didn't have the 23 pick coming into this about a week ago.
they traded the Indiana Pacers,
they made a trade with the Indian Pacers
to get their 23rd pick a week ago.
June 17th,
the Pacers wanted next year's pick
and they got the 23 pick
the New Orleans Pelicans did.
And the Pacers were like,
all right, we'll get next year's pick.
We'll trade you ours this year
because, you know, how valuable could our pick next year be?
And two days later,
Tyrese Halliburton tears his Achilles.
So if Joe Dumars and Troy Weaver, who's the GM underneath Joe Dumars,
had just waited a week, just waited a week, that trade is a lot different.
So the Indiana Pacers, they got a top four protected pick next year from New Orleans.
So you could be looking at a case in which New Orleans, in order to get Derek Queen,
they traded the number five pick and the number one pick next year.
That is best case scenario for Atlanta and Indiana.
But in New Orleans, if they just sat there, man, they could have that five pick or the number one pick, what have you.
If Indiana keeps that pick, it's a whole different story.
On Derek Queen in that quote, it's a hilarious quote.
I'm not going to get into the, look, Derek Queen's good, right?
But you have to understand, I mentioned Troy Weaver, Bumani.
Troy Weaver is a D.C. area guy.
He was on the Washington Wizard staff last year.
And who is his son?
Oh, it's the Maryland grad assistant.
And from what I've read, Troy Weaver, the GM of the New Orleans Pelicans, while he was in D.C. area was at basically every practice of Maryland last year because his son was on the coaching staff.
And so this isn't just a, hey, we like this guy. It's a, I know this guy. I saw him every day and I was at most of his games at Maryland.
And so I have already built this relationship through my son and living in the D.C. area. And so to me, it's like,
Like, they knew this when they acquired that Indiana pick at number 23 a week ago.
They knew they wanted to get Derek Queen.
And they figured if we can get the number 23, maybe we can parlay a future first to get the 15 and get him with that pick.
And they did.
I just think that's way too much draft capital to give up, way too much downside and giving up this dude.
That to me, it's like, yeah, you got to see him.
That's all good, man.
But did y'all forget you're in New Orleans?
Like this dude has weight and conditioning issues.
And we saw what happened with Zion Williamson as soon as he got to New Orleans.
And now you're getting Derek Queen.
Come on, man.
You got to remember where you're at.
It's in New Orleans.
It's a big easy.
Come on.
Let me tell you, Zion Williamson could have been in.
I don't know, Laos, Mianmar, all kinds of places.
He still had same problems.
I wanted to ask you about Khan Cinepple.
But before I get there, boy, we're going to have fun saying that name.
people are going to have a great time asking what his middle name is. Apparently he doesn't have
one or he doesn't want to tell. I can't tell which is which. Wait. You're saying that his middle name
could start with a certain letter? I had a teacher in middle school whose initials were K's across the board.
Oh, wow. I mean, you got to think about this, man. Sometimes people don't think about it. Case in point,
Steve Kerr has a son named Nicholas and he did not, he didn't stress test it.
And so he's Nicholas.
We're all going to call him Nicholas.
It's kind of like that time.
Dorisberg tried to say Nickerbocker on TV.
You can't say it's slow enough.
Scott Van Pelt told me he's like you can't enunciated clearly enough.
It can't be done.
Now, we were going to talk about the thing with Cognipple because of the last 25 first round picks from Duke,
I see 20% of them have gone to Charlotte, which is very interesting because Charlotte is very much a UNC town,
where they're probably still booing JJ Redick to this day, as I know they did for basically the entirety of his career.
But I forgot about, to me, the most interesting pick in this draft.
Big Yang Hansen, the big Chinese dude that was in the crowd.
Yeah.
Now, first of all, my question, it says Hansen, is that like, is him being called Hansen the equivalent of all them dudes?
I went to graduate school with names like Dick and Harvey.
Like, was that somebody's favorite band back in the day?
And that's the name they gave before he came to American.
as a Yang Han Sen, I don't know.
It could go either way.
I do know this.
I saw his highlights there.
And I think Jake Fisher said the tweet about Chinese Yokits or somebody said it.
I see the vision, though.
I'm actually quite surprised that anybody will let this player slip to 15 if they had any idea of who he was.
All right.
So full disclosure, I do the Blazers broadcast last two years.
So just understand where I'm coming from here.
I will say I had no idea that they were in on this dude from China.
And keep in mind, what Jake Fisher over at the Steinline reported is a Denver coach,
a Denver coach said he was Chinese Yokic.
Okay.
So this is a guy who's on another team who has seen this dude play and is like Chinese Yokic.
Now, if he was truly Chinese Yokic, obviously the Blazers would have traded up to make sure
110% they're getting that guy, right?
but he was a second round projected pick.
So this guy, man, I love his personality too.
Like when he's in the stands and as soon as his name is called, he's just holding one up.
He's like, yeah, yeah.
And did you see who his agent was?
Well, I was just about to say that.
His agent is Rich Paul and of note who represents the head coach of the Portland Trailblazers.
There you go.
Rich Paul.
When I saw Rich come out of the stands with him, first of all,
Shout out to Rich. Rich was everywhere he needed to be. Boy, he had to move up to the state.
He was down there. He was down there at the front of the stands to let him down like he was
security. Like y'all, don't worry, homie, he would meet coming down here. But with his other guys,
he was working the floor. He was making all the moves. But I want to see this. I see where this
can go. And you said it's the same thing I did. He was out there like, yeah, so, baby.
Boy, y'all, I'm up in here.
Yep. Yep. And man, like, look, let's just keep perspective.
here. He was the defensive player of the year in the CBA last year, the Chinese basketball association,
a league in which Jared Sullener was the MVP last year.
So we have to like keep our expectations tempered a little bit. But when you see him,
he has a lot of Yokic in his game. He said, I read it that his is like the guys that he models
his game after or Alperin Shangoon, Damada Sabonis and Nikola Yokic. And you can see it the way he
passes, the way he uses one hand out there, like a water polo player, which Nikolio Lioch was a
water polo player for his entire life before he came to the NBA.
This guy's 7-2.
He's got the biggest hands in the combine.
And defensively, he's got to pick up his foot speed.
But this is as much of a home run pick.
And it's right around the time when Janus was picked, right?
It's right around the time that just outside the lottery that some of these guys,
you're like, hey, how did they get Pascal, how did Pascal Seaccombe fall that far?
Or Janus ended a coupon.
Same sort of deal.
On Concanipple.
man it's just if you look at lotto picks going from duke duke duc lotto picks i've tracked this i've got this
database that that has every draft picks since 1989 and since let's just say since the 2001 draft
the university of kansas wildcats uk has the most lottery picks 24 they've got 10 all-stars
out of those 24 lottery picks since 2001 i can't
could go through them all, you already know them off the top of the head.
A 42% All-Star hit rate on those lotto picks.
Duke had 22 lotto picks and six All-Stars.
So a 27% hit rate on those lotto picks.
They have twice as many busts as Kentucky does.
But you're going to appreciate this.
UNC 12 lottery picks, Carolina, zero All-Stars since 2001.
So if UNC, I mean, if the Charlotte Hornets are going to pick one or the other and say,
we want to go get a Duke guy or a UNC guy, thank God they're off that UNC thing.
Because the last All-Star to be drafted out of UNC, do you know the name?
The names are Antoine Jameson and Vince Carter, I believe.
That's exactly right.
That's crazy.
1998.
It's crazy because they've been good, right?
Like it's not as though as a program.
They've had some lulls, obviously, right?
But as a program, they've been good.
On the high end of this, they have done what Duke has done basically.
Since Duke made the transition to getting those guys, I think UNC is still like been as successful, if not more.
But a program that we think about as producing pros is not that.
And by the way, they're salty about that.
Can I tell you, Bommani?
Like, I was a kid who grew up worshipping the Tar Heels.
I went to basketball camp there.
for like every summer of my grandparents live in North Carolina. It's why I live in North Carolina now.
It's because I love, I love coming down and visiting North Carolina. So now I live in Charlotte.
I just dropped off my nephew at UNC basketball camp and it gave me all the feels, man.
Like the marketing that UNC does and the Carolina Blue and the Pins stray, all that stuff, the Paisley, all that is great.
But when I went to basketball camp, I worship Jameses.
and Vince Carter.
Like, I can't even tell you, Bomani, how insane it is that we're sitting here in
2025 and saying that was not just the peak, but it was the cliff.
Like Anton Jameson and Vince Carter, the fact that that group, if you had told me back
then that those are the last All-Stars to ever make it out of UNC, I would have said
you're crazy.
It is mind-boggling to me that we haven't had a UNC guy make it to the All-Star since
2008. That was the last one, Antoine
Jameson. So like, what happened?
Because like you said, they're good.
They've won national championship
since then. So it's
hard. Is there something
culture wise or Roy Williams
wise that you can...
Well, the irony of it
is that historically,
what you're describing about UNC
was Kentucky basketball
prior to Cal, where it was
always about the players and the squads
themselves rather than it was about
about any individuals, right? It flipped up the other way. Duke again, then flipped and went in that
other direction. Roy in large part, this is the big thing with Hubert Davis, who I don't think
it's long for that job because this job is not the job that he signed up for. It is a much more
professional coaching job, and that is not, I think Hubert will walk away by himself. I just don't
think that's what he's in it for. But they decided they wanted the guys that they wanted, right?
there's a certain level of the game that they weren't as willing to play.
And we're going to try to win another way.
And nobody cares as long as you keep winning.
Like Duke make that flip up, but it didn't make them any better.
So I don't know how much it matters on that end.
But you're right.
Guys leave Carolina because they're like,
we want to go somewhere that will get us ready for the pros a little bit more.
What?
Like the idea that Dean Smith's program is not the one that will get you ready for the pros.
And even if say what you want about Roy,
it was a lot of pros coming out there during Roy's era.
But none of them were that guy.
You get the 09 team has seven or eight pros on it, but none became that guy.
Guys that stayed in the league a long time, but none became that guy.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
I guess the next one is Kobe White.
Like, that's the next hope is that like Kobe White can be that guy.
But he's a good score, but is he an all-star?
Maybe, maybe one day.
Pink says an all-star, but it's been 17 years since we've seen a Carolina guy go into the, become an all-star.
So they're 0 for 12.
UConn is three out of 14. Kansas, two out of 16. That's crazy. Kansas, and you put in the
UNC thing and the Roy Williams factor. Kansas has the highest bust to all-star rate in the lottery
since 2001. UK is the best. So Kentucky, much better than kids. Those are mostly Bill Self guys
because I think the Carolina, the Roy guys in that time really are Kirk Heinrich and he with
the retired jersey in Oklahoma City,
Nick Collison.
But I would put a pin in this right fast
because there is a school that you may have
never heard of that Tom
believes is the school that you
should draft players from if they went
to this one school of sorts.
Find out what that is coming up next.
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All right, we are back with Tom Havastrow.
And as you guys know, Tom does a lot of good stuff with the numbers, looking for trends and the likes.
And you got something up at Yahoo right now where you were talking about, you know,
what schools there are that maybe you should drive players from.
Now, you are a Wake Forest grad.
We do not have a mussy bogs in the background today for whatever reason.
But that's Tom's a Wake guy.
And it seems that your alma model does good putting guys in the league.
relative to draft stats, right?
Yeah, so I did a study a few years ago looking at which college programs produce the best NBA players.
And I'm not talking just like the most all-stars.
I'm saying, like, if you're a GM or if you're a fan and you're like, hey, who are the most underrated programs that exceed expectations based on draft slot?
That like maybe they're drafted 10, but they're performing at like a 5.
Like who has the most juice coming out of college?
and it's Wake Forest.
It's the Demon Deacons.
And if you look at the NBA finals this year, the guy who got ejected,
James Johnson, did anyone think that James Johnson would have a 20-year career in the NBA?
It's had to say 16 years so far.
That's just one of the guys.
Jeff Teague, Chris Paul, of course there's Tim Duncan.
There's a lot of hits when it comes to the Wake
Forest, Demon Deacons, of the four big schools in the Tobacco Road area, NC State, Carolina, Duke,
like we're always punching up above our way.
5,000 undergrad enrollment.
Like, we're the smallest Power 5 school in the country.
And yet, when you talk about NBA prospects, Jake Laravia is another one who just got traded
last year, Indiana state transfer still in the league and a pretty good player.
Wake Forest, I don't know what that's about.
Maybe it's just like when you're competing at the highest levels of the ACC and you're not from those blue chip programs at Caroline and Duke, maybe you're getting underrated. But like you look at Jeff Teague's career. You look at throw out Rodney Rogers too, Mugsy Boggs. A lot of these wake products do a lot better than expecting. The only one that I can point to, Randolph Childress. Andrew is the, that's the only one that didn't pan out. I feel like that Josh, throw Josh Howard in there. Another hit. Josh Howard, it went away.
out of nowhere.
He made the people mad
with that Obama joke in 08, and then it was like
damn, whatever happened to Josh Howard. Do you remember that?
Roddy Rogers,
my favorite Wake Forest player ever, perhaps my
favorite ACC player of like my old
present lifetime. You'll know, like,
good God. It is, that's
that you had to be their case.
When people were saying that Zion
resembles Rodney Rogers,
or just like the strength and the size
and the athleticism and the way that he played.
It was an all point comparison.
for college Rodney Rogers.
Like college Rodney Rogers is not athletic enough to be that guy in the NBA that, you know,
that he came up, but he turned into an excellent three-point shooter and a six-man type of player.
But no, but people, it was a real hashtag IYKYK-YK situation.
Whereas like if you saw Zion and you saw Rodney Rogers, like, no, Rodney was not that explosive,
but that was, that was the cop.
That was my favorite way guy.
Jeff T was always interesting because he was so good those two years he was there.
But they, after Skip died, they might as well have been coaching themselves.
And in fact, they were coached by a now convicted felon.
That's a discussion for a different day.
I was on campus when that news hit when Skip passed away, a heart attack.
That was a, I didn't quite realize how good of a coach he was and how good of a recruiter he was.
And I know, like, after he passed, a lot of coaches, you know, spoke glowingly about the kind of man that Skip Prosser was.
but like we have not been able to get back since.
It's been a really tough road for weight,
the Danny Manning era, the Jeffisdelic era.
But you talk about that class that he brought in.
And Dean O'Gadio, like, to his credit,
he was pretty good recruiter, but Skip Prosser,
he got them, he got the talent to play at a very high level.
And you're talking like Al-Faruk Minu,
Iish-Smith, Jeff Teague, James Johnson on the same team.
And Ishmae didn't even get drafted.
And he had a base here.
There's your over performer right there.
You could tell he's cool as hell.
Still in the league, I mean, he may still be in the league.
I don't think he's still there now.
But he would definitely, people love Ish Smith.
That's what it takes for you to be in Smith and stay in the league that long.
People love that man.
So the thing, the thing that I didn't realize I did this story last year is that like Wake Forest as a program,
Kentucky and Wake Forest are head and shoulders above all the other college programs in terms of how well the player does.
based on where they were drafted.
But there's this other effect,
this other variable that I think people are sleeping on,
is, did your dad play in the NBA?
That genetic line,
the bloodline of did your dad play in the NBA,
is one of the greatest amplifiers in the world.
When it comes to like, hey,
what do I want to get in an NBA player?
You know what?
Did his dad play in the league?
Yes.
then you should draft them.
Like any sort of tiebreakers or any sort of doubts,
these guys, whether it's Jalen Brunson,
Stefan Curry, Kobe Bryant, by the way,
another one of these second-gen NBA players,
they hit 30% higher than what you would expect
based on where they're drafting.
So you're moving up six slots,
basically on your production in the NBA.
It's one of the biggest effects in the draft
is did your dad play in the NBA?
So Dylan Harper, his father Ron Harper,
Jace Richardson, father Jason Richardson.
These two prospects.
We're at the point where Jason Richardson's son is in the NBA.
Swear he played at Michigan State, of course.
And his name is Jace and spelled J-A-S-E Richardson.
And he's a six-footer, but he can shoot the rock, man.
He's not as quite of a high flyer as his dad was.
But we're coming up on the Boozer twins, right?
We're coming up on Gilbert Reinas' son.
We're coming up on a lot of pro-Carmelo Anthony's son.
these guys have a way higher hit rate than a bust rate.
And I feel like they don't get enough credit on draft night.
Like Devin Bookerfeld, his father played in the NBA.
You look at Seth Curry, his brother was the greatest sensation in sports.
And yet he could not get drafted.
And he's still in the league after all these years.
So Bo, do you think like as a GM as a culture,
these guys are sliding on draft night that the GMs are like,
I don't want to have to deal with the kids.
son, like maybe he's full of himself, maybe feels entitled. Or do you think they're just
undervalued in ways that maybe the stats can't show is that maybe they're late blooms or
late developers and they just have this kind of emotional IQ that gives them a leg up in the NBA?
Yeah, it's a good question because I read your piece and the examples that I found to be interesting,
well, let me back up before I get there. I was with LeVar Ball where I thought he made a
very good point where he said, I've never seen a Hall of Fame player with a Hall of Fame son.
And by the way, thus far, we don't have anybody tossing that out of the window.
Like we don't have anything quite in that space where even the guys that we're looking at now,
Dylan Harper at the number two pick in the draft, Ron Harper, who, for you guys who were,
if you think of Ron Harper in the context of when he won those five rings, that is Ron Harper
after the knee injuries.
Rod Harper was like a,
it's Jordan and Ron Harper matched up tonight.
I got to watch that.
Not saying he's as good as Michael Jordan,
but that was the caliber of talent and athlete
that Rod Harper was,
specifically when he played for Cleveland
before they traded him to the Clippers.
The guys that we're talking about,
Carlos Boozer might be the best one,
well, to have a kid that we're talking about at those levels.
Cayenne, Carmelo's son,
we're not talking about him in that way.
Yeah, we're not talking about him.
It's like the Boozer twins are looking.
like top five type players. We're not talking about them in that case. So it's wild,
though, to me, though, one would think that the league would prioritize that exposure as much,
if not more than anything else. From what your data indicates, that's not it. And the cases that
I find to be interesting, I don't want to ruin it, but there's a lot in your story about Gary
Peyton the second. And it took him a while to get it going, but he carved out a 10-year
NBA career. Like what I wonder is specifically about the sons of players if those guys are,
we'll call them like second round picks or somewhere in there. If they have a different mentality,
what a different mentality about what is going to take for you to get up from where you are
and make it. But also, number two, a financial security that allows you to get out here and
chase your dreams forever. 100%. And think about just like Jalen Brunson growing up in an NBA
locker room. You know the work ethic that it takes, right? And not only that, the networking that you're
already in the room with all the high-powered agents and you're going to get to go to all the camps,
you're going to have a leg up. Just developmentally, Jalen Brunson is able to get them. By the way,
Jalen Brunson, also not a lottery pick. Gary Payton the second, not even drafted. Seth Curry,
not even drafted. These guys that if their father played in the NBA, I would take that flyer.
Even like, Brony James last year, I know it's such a lightning rod, but like talk to me in three years,
Maybe I'm wrong. But those are the types of profiles of guys that they cash in later at like Gary
Peyton Jr. Gary Payton the second where it's like you might not see it on day one after
college, but for whatever reason they are late bloomers. And like the only one, the only like all time
great whose son was also a all star is Demona Sabonis, right? Arvita Sabonis. That is a great example.
You might, I completely forgotten there, but you are 100% correct.
Like, Domana Sabon.
Like, think about that team.
That team, the Portland team had Harvey Grant, DeMontas Sabonis, and who was the third one?
Was it Dale David?
Jeremy Grant.
Well, yeah, but like his dad, like that Portland.
Okay, okay, got you.
So his dad are, so like, if you look at that, yeah, 96 Blazers team, Gary Trent,
Arvita Sabonis and Harvey Grant.
So Harvey Grant had two kids who went to the NBA.
Gary Trent, Jr., now with the Milwaukee Bucks,
and Arvita Sabonis, his son, Demandis Sabonis.
So it's like, man.
And then Dale Davis got there.
They traded.
Dale Davis was in Germaine-Odeal trade.
That's where that was.
And then Germain apparently has a kid that's on the rise.
Because I think Jay is our mutual friend.
Jay Caspian and Kang wrote a story for the New Yorker.
That was just, and it's actually very disturbing about how the money has
completely changed the game and all of this and stuff basically is pro basketball at the child
at the at the youth level which is now adding an additional priority to the the kids of former players
yeah it's an amazing piece i i highly recommend at the new yorker uh it's called air ball h e i r which is
an amazing little pun there um it's a it's a really interesting piece that he talked to steve nash
he talked to Jermaine O'Neill. He talked to Luca Donchich, who's who funded, who commissioned a study
about youth sports and youth basketball and how to fix it. And Luca Donchich and Jermaine O'Neal are like,
we sucked the joy out of a lot of playing basketball. It's like, I told you, I went to Chapel Hill
to drop off my nephew over at camp. And there was at the Grandville Towers on campus at Chapel Hill.
There used to be a basketball court and a pool. And it was like,
you could go there during camp and watch all of these future NBA players just play.
And it was the coolest thing.
There was a brick wall and everyone was sitting on it and just watching all these incredible athletes years before they would make it in the NBA.
Those are gone.
Like the idea of playing pickup at a camp and just having fun is out.
And it's a blemish on society is that that cool little thing that we had when we were kids is we could go to that play pickup on that blacktop is now developed into a Chapoelite.
right and it feels like that is a symbol of where we're at right now is that like these these prospects
it's a job like what germane o'neill is describing is that he's building an academy which
has a lot of merit and i've and i'm backing him and i'm like i think this is smart rather than
having them travel all over the place and lose their friendships and lose their childhood
he's building an academy where he can basically model the european academy that lucca d'ontch came out of
But it feels like BOMani,
there's this kind of like the soul of the game is being lost.
When you're basically treating youth basketball as a job,
it's like you're putting these guys into a program at 10 years old
and is like, yeah, you're going to take a couple classes,
but we're really here to turn you into an NBA player.
And it feels like, I don't know,
LeBron, he's a one of one,
like genetically hit the lottery like six times over.
He could have woke up one day and been an NFL, like,
Pro Bowl or NBA All-Star, whatever, it doesn't matter.
But he talks about it and he's like, I didn't have a basketball trainer to like four years in the NBA.
He doesn't need a basketball trainer when he's that good.
But it reminds me that none of these players, these young, talented players, they're going to get burn out.
And that's what Jermaine O'Neill talked about his daughter, who was a high level volleyball
prospect.
She's like, I'm done.
Like in high school, I'm done.
I'm done with this.
Yeah, we talked about this a bit this week in talking about the Achilles tear.
telling people about I talked to a guy who worked in college basketball and he said the real
issue on the mileage that people are talking about is the trainer time. It's all of that.
That stuff, by the way, and I don't know if there's any way to get a real good data set on this,
I'm not convinced it matters that much. I still think that nothing matters more to becoming a
professional than physical endowments. And I think in part the exposure that we talk about with the
pro kids, you know what I mean? But I'm not convinced that getting these program games as everybody has,
that's necessarily going to be the thing that gets you.
When those guys go in the gym looking for players,
they're looking for how big, how fast, how high, how well do you shoot, right?
Things that you can buy in large work on on your own.
And in fact, what they're actively looking for are people that there's a ceiling left
for you to help raise because that's how you get a raise
is by getting that guy that other people don't see and there's room for expansion, right?
And so getting these other guys, again, I think there's a question to be asked
about how much that stuff matters.
But I am with you totally on the soul of the game part.
There's a young man I used to mentor.
I haven't talked to in a long time.
And I rarely do this,
but I'm saying his name in case any of y'all know how to find him
because it's hard to find somebody named Mike Jones out in the wild.
It's a zillion Mike Jones.
Mike Jones from St. Louis, who played football.
Yes, who played football at Quincy University.
And last I heard lived in Atlanta.
If you know Mike Jones, tell him to holl at me,
I ain't hard to find.
I see your D.I.
But anyway, he said something to me,
many years ago because he played basketball in high school in a pretty decent level.
And I'd never thought of it.
He was like, those prep school kids, it's a job for them, right?
I believe at the time we were talking about Ty Lawson, for whom basketball, he clearly was
not playing basketball to go to school, right?
That was, Ty Lawson was asked after he declared for the draft if he was going to come back
and finish his degree and he laughed.
But I'll never forget when he said that.
And it dawned on me the first time somebody leaves their school for basketball,
they leave home for basketball, it is officially a job to them.
Damn near all of them do this now, right?
They're all going to a prep school or whatever.
They're going to these colleges and we're seeing these crazy transfer rates that is a
discussion for a different day for why I think that's all so stupid.
But it is absolutely a job very, very early, which I think is a negative for the viewer
and for the league because at least, for me at least, we're in it for
the human elements of what is going on. I'm not here just to see, I saw somebody make the point
once online and they were just like, somehow you're going to try to convince us that basketball
was better when the players weren't as good. And I'm like, I understand why that sounds crazy to you,
but it's not crazy at all. What we enjoy is not the maximization of an equation of how good the players
can be. It's a lot of other things, you know, that go into it. But what are you supposed to do?
if it's a world where the former players are sitting their kids out there,
and they have,
they clearly outperform their drafts like, as you say.
Now,
you got to find a way to replicate what exposure they get.
But the only way you can do it is with traders and burn your kids out.
Yeah.
I mean,
you look at how the Oklahoma City Thunder celebrated that championship,
where they're just like,
I don't even know how to open up a champagne bottle.
Like,
what is,
this beer is disgusting.
You know,
like these kids,
don't party.
They don't get, they don't go and like they don't have a college life.
Like all of that is out the window when your job is at 15 years old is make sure you are
all about playing basketball and maximizing your chances at a long NBA career,
getting that money.
I'm looking at this, this story from Baxter Holmes where he was, he at ESPN, he was
following Cooper Flagg kind of through this process.
And there was a little note here in the story from ESPN that just,
came out this week about, you know, Dallas Mavericks drafting Cooper Flag is that, remember on
the draft lottery night when Dallas won the number one overall pick, they won the lottery,
they showed Cooper Flag and it kind of looked like he was just like a robot. Like he didn't,
he wasn't looking happy, he wasn't looking sad, he wasn't looking anything. And it's because
his family and everyone around him was like, don't react because it's only going to be used
against you in social media or what have you. So just be as,
as uninteresting as possible.
And that to me, that little scene of Cooper Flag
on the night of the draft lottery
and they're like to just be as boring as possible
because that's probably going to be good for your brand
and like having advertisers and not being on social media,
I feel like all of these players are now coached
any sort of personality out of them.
And that's why Anthony Edwards is so refreshing.
It's because I think a lot of these younger players
who are awesome have been coached to just,
be boring and like don't go out don't go party don't go live outside of the gym because it can be
used against you on social media and i i don't like that beau because like you said like i like the
stories the human element and to me it's not that i'm watching the NBA because i want to see
chris bosh pouring a bottle of champagne on his head but it does feel like we're losing something
i remember like we did something on game theory about overtime elite and we didn't work this end of the
piece, but I really wanted to. My question about overtime elite, you know, was, and forgive me
if I am being, I believe the term is heteronormative, but I was like, all right, so where the
girl's at? Like, I would like to think, at least it sure appear to be the case when I was a kid
that one of the great perks of playing basketball at this high level and acquiring this level of
fame was, you know, the girls, if that's what you do, right? Or that's what you're into.
the girls are there. I'm not trying to go. This is like a cell block. We just out here making
highlights with a bunch of dudes. Where the girls at? Why can't I go to a school that's got
some girls at it? This is, this is all part of it. You know what I mean? And so yeah, but as we,
talk about what we talk about and looking at these indicators, the stakes have gotten so high
and the dream feels more attainable than ever. The point that I make, I'm curious what you think
about this. The dream feels more attainable and it's harder to reach than ever because it's more
players and it's still only 30 teams. Yep. Right. Even if you add two more teams, you're only adding
30 more slots. Right. And I've looked this up. So I'll, I'm going to go right now to the, we'll call it,
the, the 2020 or 2018 recruiting class, right? But just throw a number out there. That's Zion
Williams' class, right? How many real live NBA players do you think that, in fact, let me make
this, I'm going to look up OJ Mayo as a result. This is the recruiting class of 2007, which was a highly
touted recruiting class, right? OJ Mayo, Derek Rose, Michael Beasley, Kevin Love, Eric Gorton,
a lot of guys. How many real live NBA players do you think this draft, this recruiting class
produced. I'm going to go down
and order on names. I have sorted this by
windshares. High wind shear. Now we're going
down. So that class?
Yes. James Hardin. DeAndre Jordan.
Kevin Love. Blake Griffin.
Jeff Teague, Derek Rose,
Eric Gordon, Marcus Morris.
We're at number eight and we've gotten
to number nine and we have gotten to
Patrick Patterson.
Okay? We are at number 10
and we've gotten to Chandler Parsons.
We are at 11 and we've gotten to
Costa Cufus. We're at 12 and we're
talking about James Johnson. 13, we had the appearance of a Morris. 14. We have JJ Hickson.
You see what I'm saying? Like, there are guys down here, like Evan Turner, for example,
who made decent money. But I'm saying this country really produces like 15, maybe 20
for real NBA players a year. Not just guys who got to the NBA and played a little bit,
but like for real, really good NBA players. This country produces maybe 20 of them a year.
They're 30 something five stars.
That's how hard it is to make it to the NBA.
They're like 20 slots for Americans truly per year to really have a go at it.
Yeah.
And the way that things are going, like the fact that Chey Gildjus Alexander was what,
like the six straight MVP to not be born in the United States.
Yes.
And Wembe's coming.
So Anthony Edwards, he's still scratching and clawing his way up.
And it feels like he's the dude who's trying to climb up the ladder and someone's just kicking him down where it's like, man, you thought you were coming and you're going after Nico Eoch's thrown. And then here comes Shea Gildreda's Alexander. As soon as like Shea Gilder's Alexander is out here trying to repeat and three beat, here comes Wembe. I don't look at this class and say there's a lot of international talent, like not super high end international talent. Zachary Reesachet was the number one overall pick last year from France. But that's why.
a lot of the hype around Cooper Flag is on Cooper Flag is because he's not just this white
kid from Maine. He's also just American. Like we haven't had a guy who is this talented come through
in quite some time where it's like, all right, he's the one. He's the one in this draft class.
And there's no one else that can come close to Cooper Flag. I think that's tied to our discussion.
because look, this country is still producing basketball players, right?
It's still producing very good basketball players.
It's still producing all-star basketball players.
Superstar tier basketball players is what it is not producing.
I mean, it's boring out.
Who are the five best players in the NBA?
How many of them are from America?
Now, some of them are like a Joelle Embed who played high school basketball here.
She goes Alexander who played high school basketball here.
But there's something going on prior to high school,
clearly that is interfering with this country's ability to produce superstar caliber basketball
players and maybe just maybe it's because once you turn it into a job, all they try to do is
get the job done.
It's right.
Hey, people don't realize LeBron James was two-time Allstate in Ohio and football.
Basketball wasn't a job for him.
It wasn't.
He was interested in all this other stuff, including football, where I think in his heart of hearts,
I think he might have had more fun on the football field than on the basketball court,
but because of the nature of the game and the violence of the game,
he saw basketball as having a longer tail in terms of his career, right?
But you can't tell me that these guys who are coming in from Europe,
so one of my favorite things going into an NBA game is watching at warmups,
like in layup lines, all these European and African players coming in
and playing soccer at half court with each other.
Embed,
Luca,
Seacum,
Janice,
all these dudes are just playing soccer
and kicking the ball around.
And it's like,
they played soccer their entire lives.
And basketball came later as just like,
oh,
I'm really tall.
I think there's something to that.
Steve Nash,
same thing.
And they were talking about it together,
LeBron and Steve Nash,
about how the specialization
at a young age
is backfinding.
in a huge way. And I think the NBA is trying to figure out how to set up academies.
They've been trying to do this for years is try to figure out how to make American youth basketball
players not just good, but like you said, great, because we have not done a good job of that.
And it doesn't seem like we're going to be catching up anytime soon. And that's why Cooper
Flagg, like, we're pinning a lot on this dude because we're looking around the league and all the
best players are not from America.
we so hyped up to make the Cooper flag thing happen we ain't even got time to not like him for the best reason there ever was not to like somebody he went to duke he went to duke you ain't even got to be white and go to duke just to be clear r j barrett ain't washed the duke off yet for god's sake right like you ain't even got to do that we have not even gotten around to be like man fuck this dude and we should he went to duke he don't seem like fully one of them but i tell you this con can't know you got a lot
to overcome with me buddy.
Hey,
hey,
don't forget the Charlotte Hornets,
you know how mad they were
that they didn't get the number one
overall pick?
They drafted not just his teammate
in Colin Cinepple,
but his Mont Verde teammate
in Liam,
like the kid from Yukon.
And by the way,
before the draft,
they were showing this,
like, video on ESPN
where they were like,
here's the McNeely kid
where he's,
he and like,
he and,
he and,
he and,
he and,
Cooper Flagg were hanging out
and just like laughing
in a photo shoot and I was like, oh, that's nice.
Cooper Flag and his twin brother.
That's pretty cool.
What a time.
Top Habistrope.
I was just losing.
I was like, man, that kid looks so much like that Cooper flag.
I thought it was his brother.
And I'm a white dude saying that.
Yeah, so you could do that.
Hey, look bad.
I had the situation with them Harper boys.
I was like, yo, which one of these is the basketball player?
They can swap them boys out.
Dilla Harper and apparently is Rod Harper Jr.
man, they could be out here like I always thought the Morris's could do because the Morrises used to have the same tattoos also.
They could have easily just been sliding it out. I'm glad since they got on TV. One of them got a cut and one of them got the hair because otherwise, how the fuck am I supposed to know?
Nope. I don't even want to try. And I'm a twin. Not twin sister, but I'm a twin. I should be pretty good at this. I should be pretty good at figuring out who's who. No, not with the Morris twins.
Like I have a hard time when one of them is on ESPN. I'm like, is that Marquiv or is that Marcus? And without
that little nameplate on the screen, I wouldn't be able to tell you.
Tom Havishtrow.
Check out Tom the Finder, his newsletter on Substack.
Also, check him out at Yahoo Sports.
Definitely check out his story about the effects of being the son of a pro on your draft
stock or how that may actually somehow be an undervalued resource.
Thank you for that.
And I appreciate it.
And now Charlotte Hornets, let's see what this con canipal kid can do.
Like, I hope it's better than the rest of that UNC and Duke line.
that it just keeps happening.
No other team in the NBA
has drafted more UNC or Duke products
since 1989 than your Charlotte Hornets.
And ladies and gentlemen,
thanks so much for joining us here on the right time.
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