The Ringer NBA Show - Redraft Speedrun: Revisiting the Top Fives of the Past Five Drafts | Group Chat
Episode Date: March 20, 2026Justin, Rob, and J. Kyle Mann redraft who would be the top five picks in the past five drafts. Before they start with the 2021 draft, they talk about the news of Cade Cunningham's collapsed lung and w...hat that means for him and the Pistons. (00:00) Intro (05:05) Cunningham injury news (11:36) 2021 redraft (30:19) 2022 redraft (46:35) 2023 redraft (58:38) 2024 redraft (75:00) 2025 redraft Hosts: Justin Verrier, Rob Mahoney, and J. Kyle Mann Producers: Victoria Valencia, Isaiah Blakely, and Jamie Yukich Production Supervision: Ben Cruz and Conor Nevins Additional Production Support: John Richter and Chris Wohlers The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Explore more at https://tommy.com Tommy Hilfiger Tommy Hilfiger USA offers modern, sophisticated styles for women and men including apparel, handbags, footwear, underwear, fragrance and home furnishings with free shipping available. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to GroupShatt.
I am Justin Verrier and joining me, Rob Mahoney, Jay Kyle, man.
A lot of action to get to you today.
We're doing the redraft speed run.
We're doing five drafts going through the top five picks.
So we don't have a lot of time for banter unless Rob, you want to say something hilarious before we get started here.
I got absolutely nothing.
I think we should just jump straight into it.
Well, people have been clamoring for an accounting of the mid-off, I will say.
And I did crunch some numbers here.
Do you have any idea of where we are right now in terms of like the game break?
I think it's very close.
We should clarify for those not familiar.
The mid-off, Justin and I have made a bet.
What was the origin date of the bet, Justin?
January 14th.
Who would have the better record from January 14th to the end of the season?
I picked the Phoenix Suns.
You picked the Portland Trail Blazers.
Of course you did.
I believe the Suns are up by like half a game to one game.
It's close.
But right now, they are exactly tied.
Look at that.
15 and 14, both teams with the Blazers having a schedule that might as well be like a high school, like AAA sort of thing.
So I'm feeling pretty good right now.
Do you want to double down?
What's on the line here?
I have no idea.
That's the thing.
There really aren't any stakes because Rob historically would be very reluctant to do anything in order to do that, right?
Like you didn't want to wear costumes.
You don't wear costumes for other podcasts, right?
I would never do such a thing.
It depends on what the costume is.
So Kyle, the long-term group chat listener would know that Rob would refuse to wear anything.
Like, we did the live show with the Pacers jerseys and he finally conceded to do that.
We wanted, I think the Celtics bet I was like, oh, you should wear a leprechaun costume.
Well, that's offensive to my culture.
I'm not a caricature.
But Rob just refuses to wear anything.
I think for Halloween, no dressing up, right?
And then I opened my Instagram the other day.
And I'm like, oh, there's Rob dressed like fucking Doosie Hauser.
Doogie Hauser.
Dozy Hauser.
Were you pumping your fist at the, at Connor's video about Irish Zionism?
Mahoney, were you like, yeah.
I'm stepping far away from all that one.
You know, I think it's just about how you asked me, Justin.
you know, you never came to me and said,
hey, Rob, would you, would you be willing to consider doing this?
It was just, you're fucking unbelievable.
You try to.
You're so, you're so full of shit.
God, we need a therapist.
I mean, we perpetually do need a therapist on this podcast.
But what you're nailing down is, one, I'm not a jersey guy.
I don't know how many adults man could be a jersey guy,
but also if you are, I guess we salute you.
Shersies.
You guys balked at the Shurzy thing.
I was like, I wear a T-shirt jersey of a certain, if I like a certain,
If it's on sale, an amusing t-shirt jersey, no problem with that.
But you guys both thought that was ridiculous.
It's just not happening for me personally, nor is Halloween.
And so the idea is you were bringing up, JV, are just like not in my wheelhouse.
Uh-huh.
You would mean to be a fake doctor on this podcast?
I will do it.
Okay.
I didn't realize there was- You still need stakes.
We need like a meal or something or a bottle of wine or whatever it is or, you know,
gardening equipment for Justin or, you know, I don't know.
Yeah.
I still think the costumes are the way to go.
I just didn't realize they were on the table.
Rob.
I think they can be on the table.
But how about,
what if we change it?
If the Blazers win,
I will come and finish your bathroom renovation.
And if the sun's win,
you have to come here and renovate my bathroom.
Oh,
that's,
I would do that.
Jesus.
Although I have to say,
I hit the point the other day
where I was like,
maybe I'm in too deep.
This tends to happen with DIYers
where it's like,
you feel the.
rush of it, you go into it, and then all of a sudden you start tacking things to the wall.
And I'm like, oh, shit, I might ruin a house.
But we'll blow past that.
I got all next week to figure this out.
I believe in you wholeheartedly.
Everyone runs into the wall, but you're going to sprint straight through it out the other
side, be tallyling up a storm.
I completely believe in you.
That's good.
All right.
Well, speaking of running, let's get to our speed run here.
Go through all of the past five drafts.
We did this last year.
So we've talked about a lot of these, but I feel like things have fluctuated even in the
year since.
Let's start with 2021, the farthest away, which is a draft.
I feel like we have redrafted, at least the top five to 10, maybe 30 different times because
it's fluctuated so much.
I was certain that we would finally have solved who would go number one in this draft,
Cade Cunningham, right, considering the season that he's had.
But then almost like the gods just took it away because now we have to worry about his lung
capacity, collapse lump.
We'll see if he'll finish.
He finishes out the season.
We'll see if he plays in the playoffs.
but obviously a tough spot for him and Detroit, Rob.
Yeah, I mean, it's off the top just shit news
for one of the seasons defining players.
Cade and the Pistons have been just one of the most reliable
and bankable things going all season long.
I know they've swooned a little bit of late,
but I would have loved to see him have a chance to like run through the tape,
sprint into the playoffs,
have a chance to prove, you know,
exactly who the Pistons have been,
to dispel some of the doubt as far as what their playoff hopes would be.
Now everything feels.
like it's up in the air, starting with just his availability over these next couple weeks
to end the regular season.
And then even when he comes back, this is not a normal injury rehab situation.
It is a health issue.
And so when he comes back, if he comes back, there's just like a lot of red tape around
things like that.
There's a lot of lingering concern.
And for a player like Cade, who both absorbs and dishes out a lot of body blows, what does
this mean for him as a playoff performer right now?
It's just, I hate that we have to consider this stuff because I would have loved to see him
get a chance to prove it on his own terms.
You hit it.
I mean, is this, this, everything that I read this morning was this is like a dangerous injury,
especially when you consider any, you know, you're going to get, you're going to take
some bumps in a professional sport, especially in the NBA.
But like the way that Cade in particular plays, this seems very problematic because
it's apparently pressure sensitive to, to wherever the issue is.
So that seems extremely worrisome.
So, I mean, the award stuff is all, it's going to just uncork and annoying.
It has to go.
I mean, it's pretty much universal, universal panning, universal disapproval for that.
So I feel it comfortable that that'll go away.
I think they should just pivot right now.
I was saying to you all, I was like, I don't think this is set in stone in a way that
we can't change it.
I think they should just abolish it right now mid-season because it's so stupid.
And we're going to have to have conversations for decades about like why there's a big
asterisk next to this.
But, you know, awards aside, it seems concerning for K just on a health, you know, basketball,
even aside, like it seems concerning.
And that's the 65.
limit, 65 game limit, you're talking about, Kyle.
Yes. So he's currently at 61 games, which is particularly cruel, felt like he was going to get
there, just he could even shut down the last two or three weeks. He probably would have gotten
there. It's really a bummer just because it seemed like he was in the mix for first team all
NBA. We'll see if he would have inevitably gotten there if he did qualify for it.
But like, I feel like he's the type of player who might not even like get to that point in the
rest of his career. There's a huge accomplishment to Kyle's point. Like, when we look up
back on players careers, we look at that big, bold number out there saying, like, he made this
many all-MBAs versus this guy, the all-stars, the awards. This stuff kind of matters, especially as
it accumulates. So that's one thing, Rob. The other thing is just in the standings, if you look at
Detroit right now, obviously it's been struggling of light. The margins have slimmed. Three and a half
games up on the Celtics, a team that looks better day by day. Tatum certainly looks better. He played
really well last night, at least shooting the ball much better. So I don't feel comfortable if I'm
the Pistons overall getting that one seat at this point, which is important because the East
seems like so jumbled together.
Maybe having home court might lead the Celtics to the finals in a way that like if Detroit
had that game seven, they wouldn't have.
Yeah, I mean, the security of home court advantage all throughout the Eastern Conference
bracket, I think would have been a nice little security blanket for the Pistons at this
point.
They could lose it to the Celtics.
They could lose it to the Knicks, frankly, who are a little further back, but have a
much easier schedule than Boston the rest of the way.
the fact that these things are even in play
just kind of defies the logic
of who we know the Pistons to have been
over the last couple months in particular
they've just had such a secure lead
I didn't think we'd be talking about this
but here we are and here the Pistons are
and they have to reckon with a new reality on the court
the kind of like indefinite fuzzy timetable
of not knowing when their go-to score
and shooter and creator
will come back into the fold
this is just a team that like isn't really equipped
to deal with this particular injury
among all others.
And so what it means for them,
I mean, it could be catastrophic, potentially.
We can only hope that Kate will be back sooner than later,
but this is not the thing you want to or can rush.
Yeah, I mean, speaking to the Celtics, I mean, you know,
for I for one, you know,
it's nice to see something go right for Celtics fans,
you know, for them to get a break.
No, I mean, it's, this isn't,
this isn't like the Celtics where you can do the Ewing theory thing
and remove your best player.
And number one, your, your developmental system,
your culture, your everything,
your style of play.
can sort of sustain something like that.
Granted having a Jaylen Brown.
They don't have a Jalen Brown.
They don't have another place to go.
You know, Duren has come a long way, but he hasn't come that far.
So, and, you know, and then the J.
Nivey thing, it's just a lot of paths that have kind of frittered off and not materialized.
You're seeing that in this moment where maybe the herder thing, if they had like targeted
somebody else with a little more creative upside, Kobe White, somebody like that.
I don't know.
It makes you think a lot about what they could have done at the deadline, but losing
Kate is just catastrophic if it ends up being the case.
in the playoffs. He means so much to their offense. And like the darkest timeline is they end up
one or two. And then there are a couple hot teams in the back half in the playing mix that could
be pretty fearsome in a first round even. We could be looking at like a Derek Rose all of a sudden
is out for the Bulls and all of a sudden the Drew Holiday Sixers come and knock you out because
the Hornets playing incredible basketball. If the Sixers ever get healthy, we'll sue. You haven't
seen Joel Embed in so long. It feels like they lose a new guy every day at this point. Hawks though,
11 straight.
It's not going to be easy
if you don't have someone
who is the central component
to everything you do offensively.
That's like,
this is how dire this is.
I think there are even more
trickle-down effects than that
because Cade,
in addition to being
the element that drives their entire offense,
the kind of playmaker
who helps them compensate
for not having a lot of shooting
on the floor,
he's also one of these
increasingly rare stars
who's a very credible defender.
And I think does a great job
bodying and providing resistance
and most importantly
is big out there in terms of how he can disrupt opponents.
And when you move away from Cade, because he's no longer in the lineup,
it's like, okay, Dennis Jenkins, you have to play a lot now.
And then behind him, Marcus Sasser, you have to step up and play a lot now.
And they just are suddenly losing this kind of subtly crucial element of their identity,
which is as this big physical bruising team, at the point of attack often,
you have a Sart Thompson, sure, cross-matching.
But somewhere on the floor, there's going to be some smaller guard you can sort of pick on.
all right so getting back to the redraft though do we all have cade one no debate i think it has to be
yeah kind of go ahead and two okay two is where it gets i think pretty interesting because i thought
we'd had this lockdown it had been like a mowgli versus kade thing for a while but now two seems
pretty shaky to the point where like i had mowbly at two do i feel a hundred percent bulletproof
about that not so much because jalen johnson as we're recording this playing out of his mind the hawks
playing out of their mind. And it does get you into that zone where it's like,
Mowgli has shown so much already. Perhaps we're underrating him at this point because he has
taken one of those half step back offensively that he tends to do. Still won a defensive player
of the year. I still think long term if we're buying from this point forward, which is how I did it,
I would still go with him figuring that stuff out and then bringing it all together over a Johnson
or some of these other guys. But Rob, where'd you net out at two? Yeah. So I had Mowbly number one when
we did this last year.
This was in the throes of just like a rapturous Cavs season.
He was going to go on to win defensive player at the year.
All of that felt right to me.
And then when I was doing the exercise this year,
not only did Kate end up at number one,
I ended up with Scotty Barnes at number two.
Okay.
Who I think has closed the gap enough on Mobley defensively,
having an all defense season in his own right,
that I can kind of see what for Scotty Barnes,
there's always like kind of a bit of an awkwardness
to his offensive game.
How does he fit?
how do you want to use him?
How can he be best deployed
and where does his skill set make the most sense?
I'm kind of more willing to entertain
all of those quandaries
if he's going to be this level of defender,
and I'm going to take those tradeoffs
by a very slim margin
over some of what you may or may not get
from Evan Mobley offensively on a daily basis
where I want to note for as, you know,
very disappointed as we all are in Evan Mobley
and, you know, shake our fingers at him
on a recurring basis.
He's still an awful.
all-defense caliber player putting up 18 a game.
It's not like he's a nothing on offense.
I just think that Barnes right now is maybe giving you something a little more dynamic than him.
Yeah, for me, this has shifted a lot in the last, you know, year and a half.
I was extremely high on Mobley.
I was thinking he had a chance to be.
And, I mean, he still is.
I guess, you know, one of the elite, you know, defensive anchors switchable.
The versatility is crazy.
It's just the offense.
I feel like the upside conversation about him has really shifted from optimistic to
nauseated, I think, in the past year in a way that when you weigh them against each other,
like Rob was alluding to with Barnes, the Jalen Johnson part of this is interesting for me also,
because I'm just like in a playoff setting, I really, really value problem solving in rim
pressure and, like, versatility.
And it's not like Jalen is some zero defender.
I mean, he's not on Barnes and Mowgli's level.
I think he has an interesting case at two.
I still, in my list, though, I have Barnes, too.
So that's where I'll sit.
And for you guys,
does it feel more recency bias there where you've seen Barnes pop this year,
where you've seen Mowgli go back?
Because I just look at the total body of work,
especially offensively.
And Mowgli last season offensively is light years better offensively
than any one season that Barnes has had practically since he popped as a rookie,
probably.
Like at this point,
he has shown that he is an awesome defensive destructor,
probably one of the five bests in the league.
Can't deny that.
But offensively, he's kind of just like in the mix there.
Whereas I feel like even at his lowest point,
Mowbili still flashes the potential to be an impact offensive center.
We'll see, like long term.
Like, I still think he could unlock, like, as a pick and roll big.
And, like, he clearly has a shot.
It's just not that reliable.
A lot of his knocks offensively tend to be with approach.
And perhaps that's just hardwired into his system,
not aggressive enough, doesn't use his huge body in the way that he probably should.
But I feel like it's like right there.
And we've seen instances.
is where he's at the very least, like, gotten progress unlocking that.
Whereas with Barnes, I kind of just think he is who he is.
He's a good defender, good playmaker, good feel.
I don't know if he ever gets to the level of even Mobley offensively.
I think where I would push back is some on just like the qualifying adjectives there.
I think Barnes is like a great defender.
Has an argument as one of the most disruptive defenders in the entire league this season.
And in particular, the way in which he's been able to switch and disrupt,
even some of the assignments that he gets in Toronto,
I think just put him in a pretty unique class of player.
And the range of guys he can credibly guard is so wide that the combination of that,
plus I think the playmaking is really the separating skill if you want to talk about
their offense.
As a finisher inside, like, yeah, he's clever enough.
He's skilled enough.
There's still a little bit of clunkiness in terms of like who you want to play him
with, given the fact that Barnes still really isn't a credible long range threat.
But I trust his ability to kind of navigate in space because,
of that playmaking, because of the ability to connect some dots.
And Mobley, I think you're right that he's probably better suited long term as a center,
but that hasn't fully culminated yet.
And there's still so many times of the Cavs where they feel more comfortable with Jared Allen on the floor.
And so if you're thinking about a redraft as a project and trying to figure out who these guys are going to be five years from now,
I still don't really know how absolutely rock solid an Evan Mobley at the five lineup is overall.
long enough timetable. He still can get bodied out. He still can get
boxed out pretty aggressively where you want him to be better on the boards and he just
kind of isn't. And so you have your rim protector for sure, but do you have all of the other
supplementary skills you want in a five in Evan Mowgli? I think there are enough question
marks that I think the Scotty Barnes part of it at least enters the conversation.
Yeah. This is tough for me in particular as somebody who's thinking about these things
trying to project guys.
I mean,
it's relevant to me right now
watching college guys
because I do run up
against players
where I'm like a lot of talent,
a lot of tools,
a lot of tools.
But when you're watching
like Mobley.
Jesus fucking Christ.
Work on that one.
No,
please don't.
I'm going to just because you said that like that.
How often do guys grow out?
Because the aggressiveness
is the thing
that sort of fertilized
the development and pushes it forward.
And it makes me worry a little bit about,
even if Mobley ends up being a pretty good player,
and he levels up,
maybe a little bit,
how often do guys grow out of that?
It's like that thing is sort of the seedling
that pushes development.
I worry about Mobley for that reason
because I just don't feel like there are a lot of good examples
of guys changing who they are
in terms of their aggressiveness like that.
Yeah.
I think especially because he kind of set that standard for himself.
we run into this trap with players
where we get really excited
about what they can do
and then we get disappointed
when they don't meet it
and then we hold it against them
but he came out
and was like
I want to be a more actualized
aggressive offensive player
that is my personal goal
for this season
and he just hasn't been that
not only has he not been that
I don't think he's really
taking any meaningful step
in that direction
and so the fact that it was
a point of emphasis
and it still hasn't manifested
that is a little concerning
to me I kind of bunched them together
I almost see them as like
similar in terms of their value proposition, but I've just seen more from Mowgli. So it's hard to
like really read into Barnes. And so I had Barnes at four here. I had Johnson at three, partly
probably because I've just been so enamored with this 11 game win streak that the Hawks are on.
February 22nd is the last time that the Atlanta Hawks lost the game. That's back when I still had
respect for Robin and his decisions.
Was it though? Probably not. But I mean, it's just the flip side of there where the
offense is just like he's popped in a way. I would say in terms of like this season overall,
I think Johnson has had the best season of the three. Obviously, the defensive attention waxes and
wanes, I do wonder, especially as he scales up and gets more responsibility, how much he'll be
able to really do that because he hasn't probably played defense in like four months at this
point. But clearly the type of offensive creator who's been unlocked with Try Young being out of there
that has all these playmaking skills. It's just like the exact type of big wing
that you would want to have.
And so that's partly how I was thinking about this,
because you could look at a redraft in certain ways.
Like, I didn't really think about the teams
who were drafting in certain slots.
We're kind of just doing this as best five,
if only because a lot of these teams drafting at this point,
we're just raised to the dirt
and then just, like, hoping to get the top pick anyway.
But if I'm going from this point forward,
Johnson's offensive pop, I think,
makes the difference over,
especially someone like Barnes for me.
I have no real argument
against putting Jalen Johnson almost as high on this list as you would like to.
I think Cade has put it like understandably ascended into a different class as an all-MBA guy.
But I think Jalen has a credible case to be made over Mowgli.
I think he certainly has a credible case to be made over Barnes.
Where do you have him?
I have him just next in line at four,
but he's already hurtled so many people to get to this point that it would not shock me
if we do yet another 2021 redraft next year if he's just even higher on this list.
he just seems like one of these players who not only defies our expectations,
but I think defies any reasonable blueprint that you would put on a player like him.
Like, how could you have looked at Jalen Johnson even a year or two ago and thought,
this could be one of the best playmaking wings in the league?
Not just a guy who is participating and drafting off of, you know, the flow and the
creation of someone like Trey Young, but is instigating it,
who is like actively generating offense in a way that very few wings
in the league can. I've just been blown away. And I love everything he does. And you won't hear me
say a bad word about him. So I can't even argue with you. Yeah, it was a, it was a delayed start.
I think that's a really key part of the conversation about Jalen because, you know, he was a later
pick. He didn't get the car keys investment thrown to him as quickly as Mobley and Barnes.
They just throw you out there when they invest that kind of money in it. And I think there was a little
bit of a slow realization tray being there. The hawks kind of pivoting away from we have something. We don't
have something. Oh, we do have something with Jaylen. It was just, I think that caused a delay in
the conversation for him. Who do you guys think the leading score is from this class? I just
sorted this and I was a little surprised. Maybe I shouldn't have been surprised, but who has scored
the most points from the 2021 draft? Total points you're talking about? Total points.
Shengoon? Yeah, maybe Shangoon would be my guess too. The list I'm looking at here says with
6,534 points, Jalen Green is the leading score.
for the choice. Of course. So he's your number five is what you're saying? No, just pretty
shocking. But this class when you reorder it ended up being better, I think, than people even thought
it was going to be, honestly, with some serious movement. Well, five is interesting too. I did give
it to Shengu not a default. I mean, he's just had already so much success, even though every time
I watched the Rockets, I just want to stab things into my eyeballs, especially when he's throwing
the ball away, just all over the place. And the defense has just kind of definitely taking a step back this
year. It's just it's tough because when he's made an all-star team, I think he has the potential
to make more, if only at like a certain level, like, probably tops off as like a good player
on an above average team that's like making the playoffs and you're feisty and all this other
stuff. But like the drop off between him and the Franzes and the Trey Murphy's, I think,
considerable enough that I put him at five. I went Franz. Of course he did. I mean, I would.
Yeah. I just think with like the Shangun conversation, uh, the last,
couple months. Look, it hasn't been great. I think we can call it what it is. The defense not only
has taken the kind of spill you mentioned, Justin, but he's just had the kind of weird few months where
I constantly feel him bumping up against the outer limits of what he can do. And it kind of recontextualizes
everything we've been hoping for. If you're thinking about him as a redrafted prospect,
it's like, what if this is just kind of who he's going to be? What if the three-point shooting is never
stable? What if the turnovers are always a problem? What if, as you mentioned,
him guiding your offense can only take it to a certain level of, like, maybe slightly above mediocrity.
I think Franz has a little bit more upside than that.
And so right now, I think they're probably pretty close.
I would give the edge to Shangoon.
But in terms of who will ultimately be the better player, I think I would be a little surprised if Franz is not.
There's an interesting, we enter into an interesting territory here where, and it happens a lot with, like, downhill force guys who can, like, not even hypothetically.
These are players that can pass the ball, but they have downhill rim pressure as the kind of central premise of what they do.
But the pressure release is never quite evolved.
The efficiencies kind of you run up against the wall.
You can talk yourself into it, but it's never quite efficient enough to really satisfy.
And I think it kind of like the Randals, the Shingoons, the Palos, you know, those types of players that you're like, they are implied primary options.
It's just like, we're going to play this guy as the center thing.
And then over time, you just, I think you enter into a conversation where you're like,
is a more efficient player like a Trey Murphy, a Franz?
Like, is that a player that you're more likely to move forward with?
Like, which would you rather have?
I mean, like the Derek White, Trey Young thing was like the classic example of this.
I'm like, you know, Derek White's never going to be the primary that Trey, what is it?
Yeah, that's your thing.
You're talking about it.
It's like something like scientists have been studied.
because everybody laughed about it at the time,
but I ended up being like,
I think that that exposed something to me
where I was like,
that's a real thing that like you just get intoxicated
by a guy having primary upside
and then you hit that wall
and you're like,
I'd rather have Derek White
because I can win with him.
I need to find another primary,
but I'd rather have the piece
that can move me forward.
I think this is kind of a philosophical question.
With this exercise and perhaps like team building
from like the five spot in the draft to begin with,
if you were to tell someone without giving them names,
would you rather like a three-time all-shot?
star or a guy who probably fits best as a number two on a three or three on a very good team.
I think it really comes down to what you need in the given moment because I don't disagree that
Franz melds into so many different types of teams in a way that Shengoon probably doesn't.
He needs a very specific style in order to compensate, especially for him defensively.
The fact that he took such a big step defensively after seeming like he had solved some of those
issues last year is pretty discouraging.
Franz, it's just like, you know, you could also throw in like the injury stuff this year.
becoming a mounting concern. It's really two seasons at this point. The shooting shot better this
year, but obviously, let's see in the totality. I thought Suggs had solved the shooting and all of a sudden
Suggs can't shoot anymore. So I don't disagree. Like, if you want a guy in your mix, if you have a
star, I'll probably go Franz. But if I want to start from scratch, I'd probably lean Shingo at this point.
Yeah. I think both Franz and Paolo, to be honest, have been done a slight disservice in the public
consciousness as far as like how adaptable and useful they are to a wide variety of teams,
just by the sheer fact that they may not be all that compatible together.
And we're going to have to see when Franz eventually comes back how this all snaps into
place again.
We're just waiting to see if that can ever, ever work.
But separately, like, I think Franz not only makes sense as the second best player on a
really good team potentially that has a slightly different build, but also one who when you go
to your second unit can drive offense, who can be a primary on the ball, who can kind of like
over the course of a game,
not just a season, not just between teams,
slot into a bunch of different sub-rolls for you.
Those are always like really exciting winning players to have.
And I think Shangoon has some of that,
but it seems a little clunkier of late.
I also feel like if we're just talking about player types,
Trey Murphy might get drafted if only because every team has wanted to trade from.
Every good team has said we need Trey Murphy over the past like two trade deadlines at this point.
And so I wouldn't be surprised that people just reached there.
So just also considering votes.
I had Trey Murphy down here.
I had Suggs.
I had Giddy.
Anybody else?
I think those are the only ones to seriously consider.
A lot of notable players from this draft, certainly.
A lot of good role players have kind of found their way.
And I mean, as far as, you know, late starters go,
is there any thought in your mind that, like,
a Nemeish-Keda could be a real factor five years down the line?
If he has more seasoning, more experience,
if he proves to be, you know, if the Celtics go on a run this year,
and he is a starting level Eastern Conference finalist center,
I mean, that's a hell of a thing for a guy like him,
given the way everything originated.
Utah State's own Namia Skeda.
Oh, yeah.
Might be showing up in our top 100 rankings.
I voted for him.
I think he deserves fair consideration for that.
Yeah, it's a crazy come up.
Did we try to shoehorn in a bunch of interesting guys at the end there?
Who's to say?
All right.
Why don't we take a quick break here because 2022 gets a little spicy.
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All right.
So, 2022, I feel like it's fluctuated a little bit,
probably not as much as 2021,
but I'm sitting here thinking about a completely different
than I did last year.
We got chat, we got Jalen Williams,
we got Paula, we got Duren.
I'll be honest, I went chat number one.
I'm not mad at it.
Okay.
Who did you have?
I have J-Dub-1.
There's nothing, Apollo does.
Yeah.
Well, I think even, if you can get into the Apollo part of this,
but I even think Chet versus J-Dub is all of a sudden a pretty fascinating discussion,
especially if we're drafting from this point forward,
J-Dubb have shown way more.
He had many moments in game sevens of the finals throughout the playoffs.
Perhaps he's a little bit diminished just because he's been hurt all season,
and he's just out of sight, out of mind.
Clearly, the Thunder have been okay for the most part without him.
I just look at it in terms of, like, player types.
I just don't know how you find another Chet Holmgren.
And despite the fact that he hasn't been gangbusters,
he hasn't had the sort of breakout offensive performances,
the 30-pointers every now and then that I kind of had been hoping for.
And I think everyone expects him to have at some point.
I just think like just the combination of rim protection and fluidity of movement
and just like the feel and obviously the size,
I just don't know where you're getting that elsewhere.
And so I went shed over J.W.
I mean, yeah, you have nothing to apologize for.
You're right, Justin.
Let me just say that.
Hell yeah.
It's a two-way sport, guys.
Like, for real.
Like, I just, yeah, he was an all-star.
I mean, it's not like he's been some, like, horrific slouch on offense, almost 35% from three, 17 points.
That's what they need him to do.
And I think he's integral to what they do.
Like, the scheme versatility.
I mean, was it December when we were talking about this?
He's one of the best two-way players in the world on a team that's the defending champs.
I mean, I just think that he's, he's, he, he,
is invaluable.
And like you were saying,
these types of players just don't come along very often.
And I haven't won.
I had him one then.
I haven't won now.
I haven't moved.
I mean,
he's a singular kind of prospect.
And I mean,
I say prospect is if he's some intangible puff of smoke in the air.
Like,
he's a real deal guy right now doing things that very few people on earth can.
And the number of times I've had some version of the conversation this year of,
how many bigs could do X, Y, and Z?
How many players could do this thing that Wembe did?
And the answer is kind of always like, well, check can kind of do a lot of those things.
He checks a lot of those same boxes, not quite to the same levels as this guy or that.
But in totality, it's just a hell of a basketball player.
And the rim protection combined with the shooting combined with the ability to put the ball on the floor,
even just some like the turnaround stuff that I think could be even more of a weapon for him over time from mid-range.
All of that's incredible.
I just think J-dub, I haven't seen anything from J-dub this season to make me think the injuries are going to be
any more of a lingering concern beyond this season
to think that they're going to change the course of his career.
And that guy is no sludge defensively either.
Like that, he, you know, Jalen Williams is also an all-defense caliber guy.
He's also someone who can cross-match, who can switch,
who's so flexible in terms of the way the Thunder scheme
and the way you apply him.
And if he's going to do that and be an effective playmaker
and historically be a very good shooter,
I just like, I think that package is incredibly valuable
and feels so secure to me in a way that even Chet's like,
just ridiculous ceiling can't quite ward me off of.
Yeah, hard to argue with that.
Most of Jalen's injuries have been the hand thing that's been lingering.
I know he has more of a hamstring thing these days, but you're right.
It's just like, this feels like a blip in an otherwise pretty remarkable career.
So I think one, two probably set for all of us in some order.
Three is where it gets, I think, pretty complicated.
Is it?
Well, I mean, you look at what Jalen Dern's doing at 22 years old and the potential for so much more.
which feels like he's just kind of scratching the surface
and also just getting more buff by the day.
But I think we're at a point where Paulo has rebounded enough
where I'm just looking about this again at player types,
where I think Duren at his absolute peak
will probably be the best center in basketball.
But I look at Paulo, I'm like,
he has the potential to be one of the best players overall in basketball.
And so if I'm still buying low and betting on that,
I still think it's Paulo,
despite the fact that I fucking hate watching him play most nights.
And I kind of, and I kind of think a lot of the sludginess and some of the complications
offensively in Orlando are probably stem from him.
Having said that, though, like, perhaps that's not totally his fault.
There's a lot of blame to go around there.
And so I have Apollo at 3.
I assume, Rob, that you also have Apollo at 3.
I do for sure.
And I love Jalen Duren.
I think he's a wonderful player and reminds you constantly that he's 22 in the sense that
he'll just like try things in the middle of a game.
Just like, hey, I'm going to shoot a couple mid-range jumpers in a row just because
in a way that I kind of like seeing that push from him.
I like the idea of all those things he could potentially add.
I don't know that he will ever be the best center of the game.
I was going to say, this is a tough time.
For starters, we just put Chet as either one or two on this list.
Well, I guess I meant it more as like best traditional.
And the way the AD has become like a streamlined five best of that class.
That's how I see.
procedure. Yeah. I think that's a fair distinction to make. And his skill set is a little bit
more traditional and yet incredibly effective, very applicable. If you have any kind of playmaking
presence and any kind of pick and roll presence, he's going to be immensely valuable for you.
And him and Kate could just turn out to be one of the great two main games in history,
if both those guys stick around and play together for long enough. But Palo, I don't think,
can drop any further than three. He's, I mean, he's just 23 himself. He's still so effective. He's still
in part kind of theoretical because we're waiting to see, you know,
when is the efficiency really going to kick into high gear?
But I don't know, the efficiency is like a little nag on a pretty incredible skill set for me.
And I want to see him do more of this and more of that and get to the basket more like more
consistently, which he's kind of started to do, which is nice.
I think so much of it is just I would like to see Palo play at this point on a slightly more
normal team and the Orlando Magic have not been a very normal team over the last couple
years. But as far as who he is, I mean, it's been a long time coming. I'm still so impressed by
who Paolo is currently and what he can do, even with all the caveats, even with all the arguments
and like hand-wringing that constantly happens around him, there just aren't players of his
size who can create in that capacity. And I'm willing to bet and bank on and hope for some of those
supplementary playmaking skills you were talking about Kyle in terms of how he ultimately plays out
of that stuff. Yeah, I mean, you risk going too far. We've been pretty critical of Palo,
but I also think that you have to be very careful and be consistent about who you're going to
penalize or reward based on their context, because, you know, Duren, not that Duren wouldn't
thrive somewhere else. Like you were saying, if there's somebody that can pass a basketball and
throw a lob, he's going to look good and his defensive stuff is going to translate. But he has
benefited a lot from playing with the type of player who suits him really well. It's like a big
playmaker who can make those plays. And then Palo, you know, you just have to be fair about it because
he has caused some of the issues because of the way that he is as a player, but also it's made
it a lot harder for him. And Cade, frankly, went through that for a while. And it's amazing how
things can shift and flip whenever the context and the personnel can change. So I was just trying
to think about teams across the league. Maybe I have to sit down and think about it harder about
context that would fit him better. I guess, you know, a more normal basketball team,
I think would really change the way that we think about Palo, honestly.
I know we're not doing like where the teams were slotted at this time, but it is fascinating
to look back at the potential what if of this, where if Orlando had gotten Chet, for instance,
in order to unlock and kind of break up the gluiness of some of that offense, it would
have been interesting. OKC ultimately getting J-dub again and then Houston
getting Pollo.
I don't know, just like a weird, like, alternate timeline.
Duren going to Sack even with, with Deer and Fox.
Don't do that, to jail in Duren.
Learns how to shoot a little bit sooner.
That might have been fun.
I don't know.
You could have gotten up and down with that team.
Not the same sort of style, but, you know, would have been interesting.
Five is where it gets really all over the place for me.
I think you can go one of many directions.
I went with Peyton Watson.
I did too.
Fuck me.
Welcome to the redraft of Palusa, Peyton Watson.
Did not even consider him when we've gone through this exercise in the past.
He just seemed so far away from even the guys we were considering at number five.
And here he is not only hurtled Christian Brown with incredible ease,
but just surpassed so many of the other, like, interesting but largely theoretical players
that we talk about in this like next in class sort of debate.
I just think Peyton Watson has he's had such a great.
combination when he's been healthy this season of
the pop of like star like moments and
shot creation of just like hitting really difficult
shots that only stars are given the latitude to even take
and also a role player level of discretion
where he knows when to kind of fade to the background and when to play off
of yokic and when to play off of murray that combination is really rare
and if you have it in a package that's six nine and a fucking pogo stick like yeah
sign me up for that in the draft any day of the week yeah i mean you're going to hear me
say something right now that you're rarely going to hear from me, which is talk your shit,
Calvin Booth. You were right about that one. No, I mean, it's like the juice, I think we talked about
it maybe a couple of episodes, you know, on a given night a guy who can sort of play the part of a
primary score in bunches. And he's, his energy, speaking to sort of the drive that causes
development, I mean, Peyton Watson's electric, you know, touches and his aggressiveness have really
just blossom for them. And it's, it's been really fun to watch. I don't disagree with this at all.
Yeah, I had him to, I mean, just a classic four years away from being who he is where he played like,
what, 12 to 13 minutes in college. And so it seems odd to be betting on potential at this point for
some of these guys who have been the league already. Powell feels like he's been through like four different
spin cycles of narratives. Yeah. But like Peyton Watson's really just starting to become who he is, obviously
got hurt so we haven't seen him climb on to what Denver could become in the playoffs this year,
but he could be anything, man. I think he could be like an easy number two, number three sort of
guy. If you're like the Lakers, for instance, I'd be trying to move heaven and earth in order to
kind of shove him into your books and restricted free agency this summer. And so I had him at five.
Did I think about other guys pretty long and hard? Yes, I did. I have Dyson Daniels down here.
He would probably be the guy, if not for Watson. We didn't even talk about like the Hawks.
I mean, we kind of went by it pretty quickly there.
Like, Hawks are, like, awesome now?
What the fuck is, what happened?
Can you pinpoint exactly what's going on?
I don't know exactly.
It feels like a couple of different things are kind of snapping into place for them.
One, the clarity of not just the post-Trey Young era, but the post-Tray Young Injury era,
where they were just kind of like toggling between these versions of their team all year.
They never quite settled.
They never quite found it.
They were supposed to be a good defensive.
team and just like weren't for so long.
I think they finally have settled into a version of themselves that makes sense.
And some of that is just some of their lineups, finally have the right balance of not just
offense, defense, but like enough shooting, enough creation, enough flow where it's not just
like four-wing players running around each other plus in Yucca, Kongwu, but guys who are actually
building actions off of each other that are taking one to Keel Alexander Walker is doing
and transitioning it into the next action where Jalen Johnson is back consistently and just
like elevating everyone on the floor around him.
There's something cohesive about it that just kind of makes more sense.
I know that's easy to say in the midst of a double-digit win streak,
but you look up and down the rotation and it's like these are on most nights,
eight and nine very credible NBA players,
and they're not being asked to do what Mo Gay was being asked to do early in the season
or what like, you know, Corey Kisperit was asked to do at times at the Wizards.
It's like, this feels like a reasonable role for everybody involved.
And suddenly they're performing like an actual basketball.
team.
What a great position to be in for them where they can they can push forward with this
experimentation and trial and error and still have a top pick that they didn't, you know,
that's not tied to what they're doing.
It's pretty, I'd be feeling pretty good if I were an Atlanta fan.
Yeah, what a nice little March story, like a team that isn't trying to lose 15 straight games
and all of a sudden has something to play for.
Obviously, the schedule has played a part of it.
Like they had went on just like a pretty historic run of just like nobody's.
It was like Brooklyn twice and Washington wise, all that stuff.
Although recently the haymaker they threw to Orlando on Monday night and national TV.
I was like, that was real.
The two things that jumped out.
Actually, three things.
C.J. McCollum, not a walking corpse anymore, which is nice to see.
Welcome back to the NBA, C.J. McCollum.
I would say, Nikiel, kind of blending the versions of past Nikiel, like shot maker, dribble the ball,
like the air of the ball, Pelicans, Nikiel.
And then the role player, Nikiel, like being able to shoot is really kind of found.
a nice little synergy between the two versions.
He seems legit as a score, and that's great to see.
And I think Dyson Daniels seems like he's found a little niche there as more of a playmaker
type.
For sure.
And probably not having Trey around to have those reps has added to that.
Obviously, the shot, major concerns.
I still long term would like to see that come around because it just makes putting other
players on top of this way more difficult.
We talked about Aikoff as a potential in there.
Like maybe there's like some synergy there that can work.
But if you were to get like a non-shooter type, someone who's more.
more in like the average.
It's like it becomes pretty difficult to jumble.
But the playmaking stuff has been legit.
Like he's around like six assists a game and I think he's trending upwards.
Well,
and it's the easiest way to dispel all of the crunch that happens from not just being a bad
shooter, but an unwilling shooter.
If you're going to just like stand on the perimeter and catch it and not take shots,
that's a huge problem for your offense.
But if you're the kind of person who can either catch in those situations,
attack and get downhill and make smart plays or start with the ball in the first place,
it's just not as big of an issue.
I think there have been points in recent NBA history
where you absolutely had to be a dynamic pull-up threat
in order to make plays with the ball
as a high-usage player.
I think that's kind of true,
but it's shifted away from it a little bit
and offenses are creative enough
or even if you are Dyson Daniels,
if you want to start with him as your nominal point guard,
you can get a lot of good stuff done.
Walker Kessler, Jbarry Smith,
also have down here,
but I feel pretty good about Payton Watson at 5.
I think the one bummer I had, and Peyton Watson is just like in a different league than this guy,
but I would like to live in a world where Andrew Nemhard had more of a case for number five
just because of the body of work and how useful he is to winning teams.
But he's just not on that level, and that's okay.
He's going to get supplanted by Darren Peterson because they literally have not won a game in like 12 years.
Yeah.
All right, let's go to 2023 at this point.
Did you all see the knot on Avica Zubots' head last night?
Our guy got clocked in a way where I'm just.
genuinely concerned, just like a full James and the Giant Pete
sprouting from his forehead.
Jeez, no.
Did he get that on paternity leave, which he took for like a month or two?
What, you're against paternity leave now?
Oh, boy.
As an NBA player.
I didn't really think that was part of the benefits package,
but it seems like a good deal if you can get it.
That's true.
You're about to get an angry text from Matt Dollinger, the king.
Or just from the Swedes in general.
The king of paternity leaves?
That's a title.
I want that. Fuck, man. Give me six months off.
It was like the only person I could think of that took paternity leave.
I'd have to, maybe I'd have to go back to the well on that.
But yeah.
I'm just looking to father children at this point just so I can get some time off.
You're ready to sire?
I'm going to sire.
That's his headline on.
Yeah.
A memoir.
23, Wembe number one.
Any debate?
No.
No.
Maybe.
Two, I think, is an interesting discussion.
Where'd you end up, Rob?
I end up with Almond Thompson still here, who, I have to be honest, I just thought we would
be talking about a lot more this year, but the Rockets have been such a sludge factory for
weeks, if not months now.
But he's still an amazing defender.
He's still an all-world athlete.
He's still able to accomplish a lot, despite all of the, like, frankly, insufficies in his
game at this point as a shooter and a score.
And you still look up and it's like, oh, he had six.
tonight. Oh, he had 20 tonight. He just kind of makes enough stuff happen where I think he's,
he's still my go-to for number two here. Yeah. I mean, this cerebral kind of nature of his game
combined with his athleticism is a really interesting combination because I think it allows him
to navigate some of those odd dead ends that plague other players. Because, you know,
he just, he has point guard sensibility. I say that a lot with him. And I think that helps him
to, he grew up as a point guard playing with Asar. And I think that helps him choose his spots,
basically be smart. He still has a lot of issues that he's got to figure out. And the,
the question of, I think Rob and I debated whether or not he could be the center of a
productive offense that's competitive. Sure, he's still out on those things, but he's smart enough
to sort of work around that being an invaluable role player. And then just seems to be at the
stage of his career where he's the running quarterback that really needs to, like, iron out
the nuances of the passing game. And until he gets to that point, I'm just a little bit more
disappointing than I should be, because he is really just a one-on-one athlete and defender and all
these great things that we've been saying about him for years. I'm just like at this point,
you kind of need to be a little bit more conventional in order to take the next step.
And so I almost feel bad just like celebrating all of his unconventional, like, awesome qualities
because he really does need to nail down some of the things that we need from a star player
in order to be called a true blue all-star player. Where it's like, I look at Brandon Miller,
who I have it to over a men, reluctantly to a certain extent, where it's just like he has
everything. I feel like if he just kind of like let it rip, if we were in old school,
like Bobcats territory.
And it was just Brandon Miller
playing with a bunch of bums
and Gerald Wallace.
He would probably score 32 points
a game at this point.
Like just absolute pure fluidity,
just flow and
shoots the fucking shit out of the ball.
And oddly,
I still feel like he's underrated.
It's a beautiful ball, man.
It's just beautiful.
I sit and just admire it.
Yeah.
It's an onion ball.
It's astonishingly beautiful.
It's make you cry.
Those are bad tears, though.
You know?
Those are tears of joy.
No, we're making a beautiful, beautiful pasta dish.
Yeah.
It's Vidalia.
I don't know.
But I just, I feel like he's already all the things we want from like a shooting star wing player.
And he's getting better because all the injuries have interrupted everything.
And so I have Miller a two.
I mean, he's just turned himself into an amazing, like, high volume shooter to just so easily.
It's not just the aesthetics of his shot.
It's how accessible it is within his game.
It's the fact that he is such a willing and able, like,
catch-and-shoot guy, go-to defender.
He has all of those other elements that, I mean,
honor the legacy of a dude who considers Paul George's goat.
Like, it just has all kind of fallen into place in a way that makes total sense
and tracks, given the priorities that he has on the floor.
I love watching Brandon Miller play.
I think, if anything, I still give Amen the edge because I hear everything you're saying,
Justin, about Amen, needing to have some more traditional aspects.
I also think he would benefit maybe more than anyone else on the roster
if Houston had a more traditional layout to its team this season.
And by that, I mostly just say Fred Van Vleet being healthy.
If they had a healthy Fred, all of a sudden,
Amen gets to be a more situational creator.
All of that, like, tick-tac-toe stuff that he ends up with
and the offense, I think would be even easier to get into.
You just need someone to drive consistent pick and roll
that Amen can play out of that's not Kevin Durant.
And the Rockets don't have that right now.
So I think he's done a huge disservice by just overall the slop that is the Houston half court offense, whereas Brandon Miller is a big part of what's making the Hornets really good right now.
But there's a lot of chaos and momentum and flow to the way that Charlotte is playing that he also benefits from.
Four, this is where it gets tough, really tough, because you can go in a number of directions.
I have Tamanu Kamara down here.
didn't ultimately go with him four or five, which was disappointing.
It's big of you.
I went with Keante George at four.
I'm not mad about it.
Interesting. Interesting.
Okay.
Okay.
I just feel like every time I start to doubt whether or not he will backslide and start
to revert back to wild, chaotic, Keante, like, it just feels like he has the type of game
or it's just like, oh, 30 on a given night.
Let's see him in like an optimal context, then this guy can probably figure it out.
I just, I don't know.
I just like the type of player who in most circumstances I would probably have a little bugaboo about,
just like, oh, God, scoring guard, not that big.
Da, da, yada.
Just like, it seems like he has it in a way that that type of player typically does not.
I just think he's going to just really pop next year.
And so if anything, I feel like I'm buying low, even though he had such a breakout to start the season.
When you say backslide, it makes it sound like he's like a Quaker who like lost his testimony or something.
It's like he's falling into sand.
I got it's, I don't know.
I just like that term.
That's what Chuck or point guards do sometimes.
You can't let him fall into sin?
That's right.
Well, can we kind of group the four or five conversation?
Because I feel like, I feel like these two spots, and correct me if you guys feel
differently, are Keante, Kaysen Wallace, and Anthony Black in some combination.
Is there anyone else worthy of consideration here?
I threw a SAR on there, but I think he's a distant one.
I have Scoo Henderson on my list as well.
A long list, I hope.
Sure.
You know, 10 players.
Everybody's on a list.
Yeah.
He has moments.
I think I go Kaysen at 4.
Okay.
And to me, I was honestly very tempted by Asar in this conversation as well.
I just think his limits offensively, plus some of the recurring injury stuff,
it's just like enough to make me wonder a little bit about who ASR will be.
Kaysen Wallace already has the proof of concept, right?
Those are two between those guys, two of the best perimeter.
defenders that we have,
Kaysen Wallace not only has a place
on a championship thunder team,
but sometimes when Shea goes out,
he'll just put up 20 and 10, like it's nothing.
And that stuff is pretty nice.
Yeah, his dalliance,
did I freeze too?
Are we all freezing?
Okay.
No, you froze for a minute.
But if you finished,
wait, does he have to pick it up again, Isaiah?
Because it wasn't on a video.
Okay, I can just pick it up from there.
Yeah, his dalliance of being kind of,
like a primary or something like masquerading as one while s j and a lot of guys were out was pretty
eye-opening it was pretty chaotic but he all of a sudden was doing all of the sort of number one
things that you would hope for and it looked way more fluid than you would expect from a guy who's
been kind of pigeonholed as this defensive first and like just stay in the corner and figure things out
there's a lot there in order to tap into i know kyle has seen it at kentucky and so that's there
right and at some point they're going to get to it i hope a lot of downy
Great dalliance.
Yeah.
Now, Kaysen, I think, is another example of the primary, you know, it's another example of that to me, of the implied primary thing with Kianti, where it's like, I think it's hard to do.
It's interesting because it's like you don't want to downplay what Kaysen does and say like what, you know, assume that what Kiante is doing is harder because it's like in a way, it kind of, it's just as hard or hard to fit in to what, you know, it takes intelligence, it takes.
it takes poised, those types of shots, to know discernment is what I always kind of say,
is like the discernment to know where to fit in and how to fit in.
And Kaysen does that and demonstrates, I would still have Kaysen here because I think he's a much
better two-way player.
I don't know if you all saw Josh Minot tried to casually cross over in the half court against
Kaysen.
You don't do that.
Kaysen was just like, dude, what was Minot thinking?
He just kind of slowly broadcasted he was going to cross over.
And Kaysen literally just held his hand out.
just said that's, I'm going to take that.
I would put, I would put case in there just for all of those reasons.
Okay.
So Rob, you had Casey at four and then George at five?
George at five, yeah.
Okay.
And I think George, I love the conversation you approached, Kyle, but like which of these
things is harder, which of them is more difficult to bring to the table?
I think Keonti George has crossed like a really critical threshold this year from a guy who
you sort of reluctantly invest in hoping that he becomes the more.
fully fledged creator with the ball, the more comfortable pick and roll operator.
And now he just is that guy.
He just has enough of those fundamental skills where it's, okay, we see what you can be now
and how far can we take this?
And that's such a different conversation.
It's so much less like, you know, relying on something so ephemeral that may never manifest.
I feel really great about the development Keante George has shown this season.
If I were the jazz, I would feel at peace about the idea of putting the ball in his hands
for my offense moving forward.
And that's just not where I expected to be with him as a player,
given where we were a year ago.
Yeah.
So we named pretty much everybody.
Did we name Anthony Black?
He was in briefly.
A short list.
Yeah.
He was in the grouping, the job mentioned.
All right.
Anybody else?
Any receiving votes?
Consideration.
Darris Walker?
No, unfortunately not.
Taylor Hendricks.
How are you feeling about it?
Taylor Hendricks, you know, showing some stuff, doing some things.
There are a couple of guys in the Grizzlies right now.
It's like, huh?
Walter Clayton.
He did some things tonight.
Yeah.
You know, there's been some pretty interesting precipitous falls.
I mean, Kulibali is a fascinating one.
The optimism market has really dried up on that one.
Yeah, we're struggling.
You know, Jaime, Jordan Walsh.
Hawkins.
Hamee's good.
Yeah.
Yeah, I love Hymie.
A long time Hymie again.
Hame is solid.
And then as we've talked about, the Gigi Jackson, the upside plays of Whitmore and Gigi Jackson have just evaporated.
So, yeah, really interesting movement in this class.
Derek lively, another guy, had a ton of promise early on that the jury might be out, you know?
Well, the injuries have just completely changed the start of his career, unfortunately.
But I want to give Gigi Jackson some credit.
I do think he evaporated, but then if I'm getting my water cycle, correct, he also then precipitated back down and he's back.
He reigned into a puddle that that puddle might become something.
It could become something.
You could scoop up part of that puddle at least.
Puddles would be a great nickname for him.
Puddles Jackson.
I like it.
What's funny about this class is I remember people talking up its depth.
And I look at it and I'm like, these are a lot of interesting names that I've considered as good players, but ultimately have netted out as like rotation guys at best.
Like the Grady Dix of the world.
Jalen Hood-Hifino, RIP.
Gone, but not forgotten.
Chris Murray.
Noah Clowny.
Still like Noah Clowny.
I was going to say we were like
effusively praising Noah Clowny
and he deserves a mention.
He doesn't deserve a mention.
That's a good bottle episode for us.
If we would just want to put that in a time capsule,
us like raving about Noah Clowny
four weeks into the season.
That's that SNL sketch.
What were you thinking?
I know what we were thinking
and I still believe it.
Yeah, I'm with you.
He's good.
Let's take one more break
and then we'll get to the last two.
All right.
2024.
This one was an absolute mess last year because we were really just scraping the bottom of the barrel.
I feel like at the very least we have a clear cut number one, which is something to say about a draft that I think like even as recently as the beginning of this season, we're like, is any of these motherfuckers going to be good?
Stefan Castle, absolute superstar.
The fact that the Hawks don't have him right now is such a disappointment.
The fact that they have like a wing player who's like can play some rotation.
as opposed to like a star who could really pop in this sort of system specifically.
Like look what Cominga is doing with the extra space and attention.
Like Castle would just be that and then some.
Huge disappointment for the Hawks, but in our redraft, he's going number one.
If they had taken Castle number one,
do you think it would have made it more likely that Tray Young is still a hawk
because they would have been good enough with Castle to talk themselves into keeping him?
Or would he have been so good and so convincing they would have felt just as comfortable,
if not more so trading him away.
It's a great question.
Ultimately, I think it was more of a personality thing with Trey.
And the fact, it seems like based on what people have been saying,
like, the fact that they didn't give him an extension was just like it there.
And if they wanted to like really draw the line,
it was probably going to come to a conclusion regardless.
But you're right.
Would they have been better in that season?
Probably.
Although like similar enough issues with Daniels where it's like,
I know Castle does so much more.
But like the fact that he can't shoot.
still there and is more of like a offball destructive force defender type so they probably would have
had like just a better version of what they ultimately had is what i would say there's some causality
that you kind of have because if you think about castle with that team it's very much like the
spatial wings that shaky shooting spacing wings that play defense thing that you kind of end up in a
circle pointing at each other spider-man style in it but if you think back about what they would have
been like with castle you know on that team in the beginning yeah i mean it
It could have been interesting.
I don't know that it would have changed the arc of the Tray Young story, though.
Makes sense.
What'd you do at number two?
I think you can go one of three directions here.
I think it's Alexar.
I regretfully put Alex Sar, despite the fact that I think that Klingan will be the better player.
Wait, you think Klingin has a case for number two on this list?
Absolutely.
Do you watch the Blazers, bro?
I'm going to step back.
I do. Donovan
Donovan Klingin's
quite a good player. I'm going to tell you right now
he's not in my top five.
He's not in your top five.
It's not in my top five.
That's derelict, my friend.
It's derelict?
What?
Hold on. I got to talk myself.
Don't have.
You got to take deep.
Collect yourself.
Everything's going to be okay.
How is he not even in your top five?
Because I think he is.
What do you have against him is, I guess, the question?
I have nothing against him.
I think Donovan Klingen feels like a rock solid kind of very defined player.
And I know who that player is.
I understand why he's useful.
But if you're talking about the molds of other archetypes that could be better than that,
I think there are a lot of them.
I think if you are a pretty traditional center of a certain size with only a certain level of mobility,
I'm going to put that delicately, there are just too many ways to work around you.
There's too many ways to play you off the floor.
There's too many matchups that are just like not your matchup.
So you think he's a legitimate liability potentially in a playoff series?
You would have to say that if you, is that what you're getting at?
I mean, you think that he's going to have problems in that sense?
I think he's a really good regular season defender right now and he has to prove it in a
playoff series before I believe that like that kind of player is just like a given.
I think he's more mobile than he gets credit for though.
100% in that sense.
Yes, yes.
Clearly you have to drop him and so there's that.
He is a big, oh boy.
at the rim. And so there's like only so bad he can be. That is true. And so like, I don't know,
especially if you build the right defense around him and I think they're going in that direction
where they have enough wings to funnel you into him. I don't see how I know that you guys are
going to scoff at the Gobert Comp, but I do think there are similar types defensively,
if only because he's just a big old thing you have to work around. Yeah. I just don't know how he can't
have that sort of impact while still developing offensively where it's just like, we're talking about
Sarr as like a two-way guy who can stretch a little bit.
And I think still offensively, despite the fact that he's scaled back his shooting,
his stretch is the advantage, especially if you're going to plop Anthony Davis or another
traditional center next to him.
Like they're similar shooters at this point.
And I actually think Klingin is a little bit better.
It's a little bit more natural, I think, for him.
At the very least, he's shooting it with a little bit more confidence.
And so I get the mobility with Sarr, but in terms of like, overre,
package. I still think Klingin, like, his handoff game, they really haven't even tapped into.
And I think he is a very smart player with the basketball in terms of decision making on the fly in that
regard. And that's not like, Sars just like more of the traditional athlete type and that sort of thing.
See, I think that that gap is closer than you give Sarr credit for. I think Sars actually a pretty
good, he's not like a handoff option in the way that Klingan is. Like, I don't think you're going to
get anything great going out of that stuff. But this season, he's been pretty good making plays out of
the short role. And so it's like, for me, Saar, if,
It's the combination of all of these like connective tissue skills.
He has been such a much better score around the basket this season,
like the post game and finishing around guys who I thought might give him problems.
I think he's been pretty credible doing that.
He has the emerging three point shot that you mentioned,
which we should say like by the numbers is still a little bit more reliable than Klingans,
although Klingans had some great stretches.
And he's also been enough of a factor making those sorts of plays in the intermediate game
that it's like, okay, I can see a comprehensive offensive player.
here in addition to one who for me is just as good defensively, if not better than Klingan right
now. I think they're pretty different defenders, but I think in terms of the offensive stuff
that you're talking about, this has always kind of been my thought with SARS, that he's going to
reach a point. I can just feel like this is a conclusion that we're headed towards regardless.
They kind of did this a lively a couple years ago in the playoffs where he is good at making
those passes. But I think eventually his decision making as a finisher, I think,
thinking that like 10 foot to or even 15 foot to the rim area, I think teams are going to stay home
on shooters and force him to be like a guy who finishes because that passing is only going to
pop if they help. And I kind of feel like that is the end game for him that he's going to have
to figure out to be. And it's like with Klingin, I respect that he's going to catch the ball right
there and just put his back on somebody and go to the rim. It's simple, but it's there. And I think
Saar's going to have to answer that question. I've always thought that. He's getting better of that as well.
I almost feel like we're giving Sarr more credit for who he could be versus appreciating what Klingan already is.
And Klingan isn't someone who is in college for like four years.
He spent two years there and was a bit of a late bloomer.
And so if anything, I feel like he has as much untapped potential there.
And if anything is like, I mean, I think you're discrediting.
I think you're discrediting how much a big old boy can do over the course of like a regular season in like the first or second round.
Like maybe he was the type of player who defensively could get exposed at the highest level.
when we're stretching you out, like, what can you do in space?
Clearly, that's going to happen once they get to a playoff series.
But, like, until then, I feel pretty good about him being the best office
of rebounder in the league, a guy who's getting a little bit better in, like, at the
rim in terms of, like, his offensive outbook.
I mean, I think the shooting is legit.
I think, like, he's just going to get better there.
And so if we have, like, a Brooke Lopez who could actually play defense trajectory,
like, even regardless of my personal biases, like, I still like that type.
versus Sarr, who I think is still theoretical at this point?
I think, especially for an exercise like this,
Donovan Klingen to me profiles as a really high-level role player.
Like if he has an Isaiah Hartnstein career with a little bit more shooting,
that's like a good outcome for Donovan Klingin, I think.
Versus Alex Sarr, you could talk me into him being a multi-time all-star.
Like, I see enough versatility to what he brings to the table.
Like, the upside to me is much different.
And that's what I'm banking on.
So you're right.
Like I am ultimately prioritizing the potential over the realities of the here and now.
I just don't think the realities of the here and now are that far apart.
And so then it makes it very easy to bank on the upside.
Do you really like that BAM game?
You're just like, Saar.
Get him into my system.
You think that was an accurate representation of literally anybody involved?
Of any NBA basketball?
Kind of shoved him in a locker, basically.
He did.
He certainly did.
get in there nerd imagine if it was clinging he ain't moving uh i actually had sar at two and i have clinging at three
but i think it's way closer i for the reasons that you laid out i do think sarah like at the highest
levels of the game i think projects to be the type of guy that can scale up in that way but like
clinging at three that didn't feel like like a take when i put it down yeah it doesn't feel like a
take uh but you're gonna hate the rest of my list i can already tell oh boy do you want to do you want to go
with you have that uh modest ruzellist number three
I had a member.
Okay, okay.
So we're in some alignment.
Kyle,
how do you feel about Modus Buzellis these days?
I've always,
I've always kind of had to talk myself into him,
but he's like,
he's,
I love his energy.
I love his motor.
The skill set,
you know,
over the course of his career,
he's a good enough shooter to make me believe.
I think he's going to,
he has the upside to draw more,
like a lot of fouls in the half court.
And he's a good,
like,
I think those things are,
you know,
over,
I've always been a little,
cautiously pessimistic about him, but I don't really totally know where that comes from.
Some of that could be just he hasn't been enough of a drink-stirring kind of catalyst for the,
bulls to, and that's probably where that's coming from, but it seems like you guys are
sell me on him. Tilt me the other direction. Well, I am predisposed. Like, I like a lot of the
elements of his game just on a baseline. I love kind of the weird rhythm that he plays with, how
unpredictable that makes him as a driver. It's like very difficult to stay in front of in a way that
I'm totally with you, I think, will ultimately manifest in him drawing a lot of free throws over
the course of his career. Take that with a little recency bias, a little plop of like, oh, here's
him dropping 30 on a team. Here's him dropping 40 on the Warriors. There's just like enough of these
things coming to the four that I already liked that like I can feel my internal confirmation
bias, just like pinging like a slot machine. Who hasn't dropped 40 on the Warriors? I've done that.
You've done that. Come on, Rob. It's a fair concern these days. I know these games are not.
of the highest order. I know this isn't the highest
competitive standard, but
a big wing who's hard to stay in
front of, who has real two-way potential,
who is enough of a shooter, who can
work as an intermediary, not like the best
playmaker in the world, but can make like smart
functional decisions with the ball.
That's a really valuable player in the modern NBA.
And so I can kind of talk myself
into him pretty easily given they already
like a lot of the aspects of his game, but
he's been really great over the last month in particular.
Yeah, 21 points.
He's averaging post-all-star break. And now this
is a yearly tradition with the Bulls where at the end of the season, some player pops and we all
have to reconsider him. I never really have to reconsider him because I always like the model
that he had, especially once he showed enough athleticism to compete at like the highest level.
And some of the other stuff is coming around. He's starting to use his physicality, I think,
a little bit more these days, which has been nice to see. And so a lot of things going wrong with the
bowls, but clearly he isn't one of them. If anything, like, he was an easy choice for me at four.
I guess, like, you would think. But you're clinging ahead of him.
I have clinging ahead of them.
Yeah, I don't think, even for all the things that I said,
I would still take the promise of Bezellis ahead of,
because I think it's harder to find.
Yeah, I could totally see that.
Yeah, for sure.
I had read at five, though.
What about, what about A.J. Mitchell?
Yeah.
Oh, I forgot about A.J. Mitchell.
Yeah.
This is like, not the deepest draft class overall in terms of the 2024 group,
but A.J. Mitchell, at 38, I think, could go down as like an all-time
kind of pick in terms of value at that spot.
He's kind of exactly what you want,
maybe not in like a go-to primary point guard
in a starring sense,
but has all of the elements of that kind of player
that to me he is my number four
and I felt pretty good about it.
He's in an interesting position
where they positionally,
you could see where they separate and differ
where if you thought about like what AJ would do for the rockets,
like how he could make in the half court,
give them a little bit more playmaking a little bit more, you know, and then, but on the other hand,
I do wonder to get back to the circumstance thing. It's like, how would I feel about Reed if he
were playing in that driving kick super healthy, oasis of open shots that he would get with OKC?
I think that those two really comparable, when you compare their situations, I think you can kind
of get a look at how they're different as players.
But counterpoint, would AJ Mitchell ever get the EMAudoka treatment of like, you can't
guard anybody. Like he's competitive enough
defensively. I think there are just certain coaches
and certain styles that just don't fit
Reed. I don't know that there's a team
in existence that couldn't use AJ Mitchell.
And that's a testament to
he is on the ball, off the ball, how much
fight he puts in defensively.
Just like a nice little all-around game.
Somehow I was considering Quentin Post
for a couple minutes, but somehow overlooked
AJ Mitchell. Just
went by him in that second round there. Yeah, I would probably
have him at five then. But
to Kyle's overall point about OKC,
Like, is Reed not a better version of like Jared McCain who gets slotted into that just immediately?
Absolutely.
Dark days in Philly, man, seeing the Jared McKeown.
I sympathize for the Philly.
It's some real depressed squidward out the window watching.
Some of the worst Squidward out the window watching, I think I've ever gotten, gotten window from the Philly fans on the McCain thing.
His, his barbs as well, like, they're real, like, cutcha where you don't really see it.
Yeah.
It's like, oh, yeah, you know, it would have been nice if Embed, set.
screens for me. I didn't realize that could happen, but it seems like those guys are doing well.
I wish them the best. He's been really good about it.
I mean, right in your zone. I would think that maybe some elements of the Jared McCain
presentation and experience are not your cup of DJV, but the spite, the low-key little barps.
Sagger and spite, too, right? Yeah. It's really, it's a real, it's a real hair-thin dagger
that he's sticking in there. And you're like, damn, it was hair thin, but it hurts. Yeah.
you're saying I can't be a TikTok star
I'm saying you could if you wanted to be
but do you want to be
I can't say that's a leap
I could do that
I mean you're already a Netflix star
I mean who's to say how far you could go
that's true
anybody else on this is
this list is pretty long
I will say it's like pretty
crunched together I feel
not all that different about most of these guys
yeah I mentioned a second ago
this was not the deepest class
I mean in terms of like potential stars
but role
players, like, this is an incredible second round group.
This, like, there's just so many useful guys right now who have already kind of come to the four.
I have down Kishan George.
That's my number five.
Okay.
Wow.
Over Donovan Klingin.
Over Donovan Klingin.
Okay.
I mean, I've talked a lot about Kishon George on this podcast.
I don't think I need to do my spiel in its entirety over again.
But a giant wing who is a very talented playmaker already.
Yes, clumsy.
Yes.
overtaxed in his current role with the Wizards.
An aggressive defender who yes
needs to reel it in a little bit.
But I just think he's going to be really good.
I think he's going to be really good for a long time where
I am willing to bet on that potential even over Klingin.
New Batum.
I mean, that's a fucking player.
New Tomb?
No, I don't think New Tomb works.
We can't go that far.
I don't know that I'm ready to go to Baton, but
because that one's, I'm a big Baton guy.
So that one, I'll sit to the side, but he's good.
Yeah.
All right.
Should we get to 2025 now?
Let's do it.
Yeah.
This one is like not different whatsoever for me.
I think I have pretty much the exact top five as it went out, except for Khan over VJ.
So I have flag, Harper, Khan, VJ, Ace, right there.
I think the five spot is tough.
Like Ace is good.
It's good lately as well.
He's been quite good lately.
Like he's banging in threes.
You can see the vision.
I just like don't know what to do with this five spot.
Because I've had most,
I had ace on it initially.
I've had coward there.
I've wanted like,
should we be giving Derek Queen more credit
for who he could be in a different context.
Well, before we get there,
before we do that,
did you have Harper over Khan?
I think is the big debate.
I think this is the big one.
And we've talked about this at various stages in the season,
like how different the Spurs would look
if they had con right now.
I still think it's Harper.
And I don't think if you look at what Harper's done for the Spurs this season,
the ease with which he glides into the pain,
that is a star.
He's going to be a star-level creator whenever he's given that opportunity.
I don't know if that's with San Antonio.
I don't know if that's going to be somewhere else.
We'll have to see how it all shakes out with Castle and Fox and everything.
But I just don't see anything in his play this season to tell me he is not going to be
like a real deal every night creator for any team that wants to give him that much less.
leverage. And the Spurs just are too good to kind of do that on a full-time basis, but that's not
really Dylan Harper's fault at all. This is another cold dead fingers for me, Rob. I was surprised you
even alluded to the idea of him playing for somebody else. I mean, maybe UFA down the road.
If I'm the Spurs, we're keeping this guy. And, you know, this was not a hard eval. I wasn't
unique in feeling this way. The offensive stuff I thought was clear as day. He's like a Shea-level
paint presence guard. The defensive stuff is like he has nights where he decides to play
defense, like the night he was checking Brandon Ingram, the physicality, man, the lack of fear,
the versatility, the link, he's strong. That's the stuff where I'm just like, holy, holy Moses.
Like, he's a special player, man. I'm still rock-sol with him at two. As great as Con has been.
I think that's one of those areas, too, where we talk so much about can Harper and Castle play
together. What do they sacrifice having those guys on the floor? Handering about their long-term
fit and their short-term viability in this year's playoffs. I think,
playing with someone like Steph Castle
and the intensity he plays with defensively
and obviously having Wembe behind you
like that's the kind of thing that revs up
a defender like Dylan Harper who you're right
like it is a little bit of a pick and choose
moment for him as far as like when he is really
applying himself but it's so stark
when he does that if you can
increase that motivation at all
increase that focus at all
he could be just I mean one of the best
two way guards in the league for a very long
time it's a tough
comparison at this stage
right now because if you were to ask me, and I think most people, I think you guys might agree with
this, would the Spurs be better right now for this season with Khan over Harper? It'd probably
be con, right? Just because he was more what they needed in order to complete the picture as long as
Fox and Castle are going to be there. And he would have had a very nice career with the Spurs.
Probably would have popped in similar ways. But I think Harper is discounted in part because he's had a
pretty typical rookie trajectory. And so Khan has had a typical trajectory. And so he's been so good
so quickly. And I think he's going to be very good for a lot of years. But I just think the high end
of Harper, as you guys are saying, is just on another level. That type of creation is just so hard
to find in general. It didn't surprise me to see the Spurs go with Harper. Then it wouldn't
surprise me if the Spurs, even if we were doing this by team, would still go with Harper for that
long-term pretender. Yeah. So five is really.
where it comes down to.
I originally wrote down Coward,
but as we talk about it,
I feel like I'm edging toward Ace Bailey again.
Yeah, that's why I'm having.
Okay.
Yeah, I think, again,
I'm not really an Ace guy.
I see a lot of flaws
and potential pitfalls in his game,
but I want to give him credit
for doing exactly what Will Hardy and the Jazz
have asked him to do this season
and really kind of flaring out
all of these supplementary skills
that I think could make him a good
supporting wing
for a long time.
And we already know that he has the all-star potential as a score,
that he has kind of like a bucket getting quality
that not a lot of guys have.
If you have those two things in tandem,
that's pretty effective,
and I think positions you to be a good, viable NBA player for a long time.
And that's probably enough to kind of
just get him a little further past Edgwick Howard for this spot for me.
And then Queen, I think, is like an archetype that deserves consideration.
But if you're a big who doesn't defend
and currently doesn't space the floor,
There's just like such a hard limit on that.
That could change.
He could make us all look very silly.
He could be, you know, number two or number three on this list with, you know, a couple
shifts in his game.
But as it stands, I think it makes sense to give Ace the nod.
Yeah, the conditions for Queen to reach a ceiling are very tricky.
And it's a tough bet.
At five, I mean, there are just so many interesting kind of fringe guys in this class.
I think, you know, the Nets, the cluster of Nets players, that has been so,
up and down this season. I love Coward, but I see where you're going with the Ace Bailey thing,
where he's also just so, so young. And it's like, I like Coward too, but Cowards had the benefit
of time. And if we see 22-year-old, 23-year-old Ace Bailey, I'm just like the higher version
of that. Granted, I mean, Coward shows creation upside, too. So you can kind of weigh that where
it's just like, I don't know that I'm ever going to trust Ace to be a creator. I don't know how you
all feel about that.
At this point, I'm just looking for moments for any of these guys.
And some of those like high-end stuff kind of fades into the background.
Whereas I would say in terms of like moments where I had to stop and really think about
this player and what he could be, I would say Queen had one of those earlier this season.
I think we'd had like a full week or two where it was like, is Derek Queen like a fucking
MVP candidate?
And that was fun.
Ace is having that kind of now.
Like if you bother yourself to watch the jazz basketball and honestly you should have your
head checked if you do, which.
that's me.
There we go.
Ace is like kind of coming around.
He's been that like big shotmaker who's had now opportunities in order to showcase.
And it's just like it really does revert back to pre-draft sort of archetypical stuff where it's like he's big as hell and he could shoot the shit out of the ball.
And when it comes down to it, that is the easier thing to fit as opposed to Queen who like look at what a Pelicans game looks like right now.
They have all the incentive in the world to allow that guy to play and really find himself because he is their future.
They don't have the draft pick.
they're reverting back to the veterans, and he's struggling to get minutes. And, like, part of that is
just institutional. It's organizational. It's the decision to, like, try to be a little bit less
embarrassing on the court. But, like, if he was that guy, I feel like he would have popped
in the midst of this a little bit more. And I think it speaks to the overall difficulty of, like,
shoehorning him into an established structure as opposed to building an entire thing around him.
Yeah. I think what no one really wants to tell you about being a playmaking big in that mold is it's
really hard to do and to sustain and to continue to surprise teams, even for someone as creative
as Derek Queen. Like even if he got every opportunity in the world, this would be a tough rookie
season for him. He's not. I don't know that he will continue to. I hope he gets those breaks at
some point, but you can't just like assume per 36 he's just going to like become the player
we've seen in glimpses. It has to be more than glimpses. Yeah. So Coward, obviously on this list as well.
Trey Johnson, kind of in the same little mix there. Had some flashes. But overall,
want to see more.
Colin Murray Bowles, obviously.
The detonator.
We love it.
I also have Carter Bryant down here.
I was going to mention Carter Bryant.
Yeah.
How is he both so young and looks like he might be 12, like just from like a face scan?
When you see his face, yeah, he's 12.
But then he's also fucking ripped and huge.
And I feel like he has the type of frame that could add more.
Like, is he just going to be once he gets out of the NBA, just like a bodybuilder
and all of a sudden just like getting the oil on them and doing the uh-huh all right where are we going
i mean really getting lathered up on this one you really kept going getting the oil on him and
it's like the register went a little deeper really did then we get a bounce card we're getting
some light reflecting off of certain spots it's just like are you direct something in your mind
justin get the right music uh something low 80 bpm you know saxophone you know saxophone
reverb on it.
Well, I love the answer, but Carter Bryant's a Clero guy.
You know, I think there's already something in the register that could just work perfect
to this occasion.
You know, he's a sensitive, modern man.
Holy shit.
I'll pull some Clero out every once in a while.
As you should.
But a 19-year-old NBA player?
I'm just saying it's a brave new world.
If you're listening to him talk, he's a worldly guy.
He's a worldly guy. He's got a good head on his shoulders.
And yeah, like, the side, every time he, like, really gets in the mix, the size always
kind of catches me.
Just in a moment where I'm like, yeah, I knew you were a big wing, but I didn't know you were
that big a wing.
I didn't know you were just like Trey Murphy waiting for your moment.
But like it really feels like the Spurs have just an awesome combo forward prospects that
they can pull out at any time to develop whenever they have the opportunity to do that.
And unfortunately for Carter, Bryant, they're unfortunately playing for the title right now.
So he will play some but not a ton.
And yet if you told me three or four years from now, he's just going to be a real contender
for one of the spots on this list,
I would 100% believe you.
He has all defense potential.
I really think he does.
He's a special defender, man.
He can switch up and down the chain.
He's strongest shit,
and he's only going to get stronger.
He, like, eradicates dudes
when they try to shoot on him sometimes.
Like, he gets up with force.
I'm a big fan of Carter, Brian.
Just thinking about what his favorite Clero song is at this point?
I didn't know where.
Is it sexy to someone?
You think that's like...
Oh, maybe?
I can also see him just being,
pure like sad boy.
Just like, you know, bags, you know, just really keeping it mellow.
Is that you?
Didn't expect Clara to come up today.
This is good.
Again, it's just, I feel we have untapped depths to this podcast in so many ways.
You just need Carter Bryant to come up to bring them out.
That's such a wild one, too, because I understand if, like, a young person had like a pop
sensibility, like, like Taylor Swift or even if you, like, had a country pop thing going on
with, like, Shania Dwayne or something.
But, like, Clero's, like, deep-cut, like, sad girl indie stuff.
I don't think that really pierces into the TikTok Gen Z sightguise these days.
But maybe I'm wrong.
Well, I've done a quick little bit of research.
And apparently there are some sources on the internet that cite softly as his favorite
Clero song.
And I think there's been either some kind of photographic evidence or maybe he posts on
Instagram of him listening to add up my love.
So we all contain multitudes.
Clero, coming on our little chat?
Parks.
You guys like Arlo Parks?
What are we doing now?
What kind of poding?
Who are we redrafting if
Clero and Arlo Parks are in the mix?
Well, we've been talking about doing a team of the season
episode. I think we're circling the Spurs.
Like, what if instead of Victor Webbenyama, we ask for
Clero?
I think Clero might be the
toughest get in this podcast.
history. I just don't think that's going to happen for us.
But I support us trying it.
We got a lot to throw.
We got a lot to, you know, we got Justin's cinematic ideas.
We won't lead with that.
But, you know, no.
Yeah.
All right.
Once we get to Clareau, I think that's it.
I think we've been talking for like two hours.
I'm out all next week.
I think this might be the first time I've ever missed back-to-back episodes.
How are you feeling about it?
A little mixed.
Do you guys have anything big and special planned while I'm away?
No.
I'm sure we'll do a mailbag.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
All right.
Should I just like step away and then never come back?
What if I just like disappeared?
Don't ask me that.
Baby.
Yeah.
You're threatening to like Dr.
Robbie us?
Is that what happens?
Well, not yet.
But it's the show is circling around the idea that it might.
Oh, right.
Because he has this about, yeah.
If you spoiled fucking Pitiful.
I haven't seen anything beyond what's aired.
I'm just saying that man has been on.
I will ride off into the sunset of my motorcycle
and maybe off a cliff and never to return.
I hope that's not what you're alluding to, Justin.
Can I be a motorcycle guy?
I think you can definitely be a motorcycle guy.
He's like a little Honda bike guy, I can see.
You're like a, you're not like a hog.
You know, he's...
You don't have that hog in you?
I just see Justin on like a little Honda bike.
I don't know, like some 80s kind of,
pain on it.
It's plain seger.
Just like get a little
little basket on the back there and put all
my like plant goods that I get at the store.
Yeah.
You can look for me.
I mean, I would watch, you know,
let's just take this opportunity to pitch straight to Netflix.
A travel series, Justin Barrier, on his hog,
experiencing Americana.
Who wouldn't tune into that?
I'm not going to tune into anything involving
Justin experiencing his hog.
No, Justin goes hogwilds.
I think, no, Kyle, you will not steer us off of this ship.
This is our money-making endeavor.
This is our future.
All right.
Well, maybe I need to just quit and do that.
That's it for me, guys.
Going forward.
All right.
Thank you to Isaiah Blakely.
Thank you to Ben Cruz.
Thank you to Victoria Valencia.
We'll be back, or you guys will be back on Monday.
I'll see you down the road.
On a hog, perhaps.
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