Michigan Mock Draft Positions

Submitted by 1464 on

There has not been much talk about the upcoming NBA draft, which is surprising given the huge effect it will have on the constitution of our team next year.  There have been 30 threads created on the NBA draft during the time I got pulled away from writing this.  Correct me if I’m wrong, but April 16th is the declaration date, so we will know who is staying and who is gone by then, right?

There hasn’t been much stated about who is packing up their rooms and who is entrenching themselves for another long March.  I’ve referenced a few mock drafts to get a range on our potential pro prospects.  McGary's range is odd, as most sites don't have him in the top 60.  Maybe he was omitted from a few mock drafts due to saying he's 100% on returning to the team.

 

Trey Burke – (6, 6, 7, 7, 9, 9, 13, 17)

Possible teams have included: Kings, Hornets, Pistons, Thunder, Mavs, Bucks

 

Glenn Robinson III – (10, 10, 10, 10, 11, 16, 22)

Possible teams have included: Timberwolves, Nets, Bullets, 76ers, Hawks

 

Mitch McGary – (18, 24)

Possible teams have included: Knicks, Hawks

 

Tim Hardaway Jr. – (19, 28, 30, 32, 32, 47, 51)

Possible teams have included: Heat, Magic, Cavaliers, Bulls, Thunder

joeyb

April 10th, 2013 at 12:16 PM ^

We don't know that he doesn't have that kind of range. He just hasn't taken those shots in game. He has, however, taken a lot of 15' jumpers and hit them with relative ease. With the number of 3 point specialists we have on this team and his ability to drive, it wouldn't surprise me if the coaches told him not to take the 3 even if it's wide open. At the same time, it wouldn't surprise me to see him start taking those shots next year if no one is going to guard him that far away from the basket. If he can show that he can make those shots at all, it will open up things in the paint a lot more when he comes up top for a screen.

feanor

April 10th, 2013 at 12:53 PM ^

If he can shoot the three, is there a good reason the coaches would tell him to pass up wide open shots, especially a Beilien who likes his bigs to shoot?  If a player who has played significant minutes and has not attempted a single three point shot over the course of a season, there probably is a reason and it isn't because the coaches are hiding thier secret weapon.  

The guy shoots 44% on free throws, I think you might be overselling his range just a tad.

Cold War

April 11th, 2013 at 6:39 AM ^

Eh. Cowens was smaller, a better shooter, and a lot faster. He didn't rely much on the hook. I think the diving on the floor is what drove that comparison.

His Dudeness

April 10th, 2013 at 12:28 PM ^

He could be considered one of the best basketball players ever had he played his whole career in the states. Think of him like a basketball version of Ichiro. He had a phenominal career both in his country and an above average career here given his age. Not many people know that about Sabonis.

mfan_in_ohio

April 10th, 2013 at 12:46 PM ^

McGary and Varejao have a lot of similarities.  About the same size, both high-energy players, neither has much of an outside shot and both are below-average FT shooters.  McGary has a higher ceiling, I think, because he is going to eventually pack on a little more muscle and be able to be a more physical defender, plus he can handle the ball better.

My name ... is Tim

April 10th, 2013 at 1:02 PM ^

Not as solid defensively, but could be down the road. Very active and disruptive. 

Offensively, aside from the obvious bank shot repoitoire he can run the floor in transition and even run the point on it with crisp passing and good awareness of spacing, excellent court-vision. Has range out to a good distance for a big guy. Lacking in Duncan's post-game at this time which is likely the main fault with the comparison.

Solid rebounder, though doubtful he will ever be a league leader or close, more like a 9-10 guy.

I think poor man's Duncan is more accurate than Love or David Lee who are just white guys who are similar build and not slow and plodding. I think those comparisons are lazy. Love is a much better rebounder than McGary and shares almost nothing in common with him. His defensive game is totally different - McGary will be a much better defender in the NBA - and Love has range that McGary will never have. Lee is also a much better rebounder and a terrible defender who isn't nearly as skilled offensively as McGary.

StateSmells

April 10th, 2013 at 1:22 PM ^

I'm really not "race card" guy, and racial issues are not a significant portion of my daily thoughts, but I do get annoyed that white basketball players are only compared to, or remind people of, other white players.  Just like a black QB can only remind you of another black QB.  There are 2 kinds of NFL slot receivers:  white ones to remind us of Wes Welker or Ed McCaffrey, and everyone else.

Ok, no more rant, but thanks for reasonably comparing McGary to someone without considering skin color.

jackfl33

April 10th, 2013 at 1:30 PM ^

Except for it's not that reasonable. Tim Duncan is a top 20 player all time. No offense to Mitch, but he's not even a "poor man's" Tim Duncan. I mean Mitch doesn't even have a single post move.

WolvinLA2

April 10th, 2013 at 7:14 PM ^

It's meant as a comparison in style, not in ability, necessarily.  "Poor Man's Tim Duncan" doesn't refer to every center who isn't as good as Tim Duncan, but rather a player with a similart style to Duncan, but not as good, or not as good yet.  Not every big man plays like Tim Duncan.  Whether or not you agree with the example is different than saying it doesn't tell you anything.  

If there was a super athletic but not so skilled big man coming out of college, you might call him a Poor Man's Dwight Howard instead.  

Indonacious

April 10th, 2013 at 11:47 AM ^

From people like Chad Ford and Givony from Draft Express...(both pretty reasonable)

It seems as if Burke (obviously), GRIII, and McGary all have 1st round grades- Burke being top 10 and the other 2 being top 20. Thjr is likely a 2nd round pick. 

Best case scenario is that we only lose Burke and Worst case scenario is that we obviously lose all 4 of them.

1464

April 10th, 2013 at 11:58 AM ^

Not sure who is right here, but CBS:

http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/blog/eye-on-college-basketball/21965099/nba-draft-early-entries

"Wednesday, April 16 is the NCAA's official Early Entry Withdrawal Deadline -- when players have to pull out in order to maintain their college basketball eligibility."

It may be that the NBA has a later deadline, but the NCAA athletes that don't withdraw their inquiry by the 16th are considered ineligible.

Boomer519

April 10th, 2013 at 12:11 PM ^

I believe if a player declares for the NBA the NCAA says he must withdraw by the 16th to remain eligible. The NBA deadline for declaring is the 28th. So a kid not sure what to do would not declare early to maintain NCAA eligibility. Once he makes a decision he could declare on the 27th but would not be able to change his mind because he would then be ineligible.