NBA Draft Combine

Submitted by Michigan4Life on

Today is the first day of NBA draft combine.

Nik Stauskas measured out at:

6'5.25" in socks; 6'6.5" in shoes, 6'7.75" wingspan, 8'6" standing reach and 206 lbs.

GRIII measured out at:

6.5.5" in socks, 6' 6.75" in shoes, 6' 10" wing, 8' 4.5" reach and 211 lbs.

GRII wingspan and standing reach is a bit disappointing but he has explosive leaping ability that makes up for it.

Nik measured out exactly as expected but has the same wingspan which will hurt him a bit, but not too bad.

Gary Harris came out shorter than expected at 6'2" which will hurt his stock as a prospect. Payne measured out at 6'9" which is fine for him as a PF.

Measurements can be found at: http://stats.nba.com/draftCombineAnthro.html?pageNo=1&rowsPerPage=100

ijohnb

May 15th, 2014 at 2:20 PM ^

possible that Gary Harris could wind up being more of a point-guardish like substance?

Michigan248

May 15th, 2014 at 4:22 PM ^

you must not have watched Ben Gordon when he played in Chicago, and Delonte was a nice role player. There is only a handful of superstars in the Nba, everyone else is a role player or bench warmer

MGoChippewa

May 15th, 2014 at 2:28 PM ^

Stauskas did get measured today, came in with 12% body fat.  The body fat thing could be a bit of a red flag, as his is the highest of any player measured so far.  Also the highest of any SG in the Draft Express database, which appears to reach back all the way to 1987.

Space Coyote

May 15th, 2014 at 2:45 PM ^

Harris measured 6'2.5" in socks, so likely he'll coming in around 6'3.75" with shoes, which is rounded up to 6'4", which isn't extremely short for an NBA SG. His nearly 6'7" wingspan should help him play the 2 at the next level.

Payne, likewise, is nearly 6'10" in shoes, and has a 7'4" wingspan, which is plenty for the PF position.

Vonley, I think, is the most hurt by this. Though your listed height is without shoes, he'll likely only be 6'9" with shoes, and his skill set is more in line for the C position than the PF position, and he'd be fairly undersized for either spot. That could push him out of the lottery. EDIT: Was looking at the wrong wing span and reach though, both of which Vonley has very good measurements in, helping him a bit.

Young John Beilein

May 15th, 2014 at 6:18 PM ^

Vonleh's game is indeed well suited to play PF in the NBA imo.  He didn't score a ton at IU, but its tough for freshmen to do so.  He has flashed the ability to step away from the basket and hit shots out to the three point line as well as some dribble drive skills.  I think he gets his shot off much quicker than Payne and in the long run is much better suited to play PF than Payne is.  I see him as a poor man's Anthony Davis.

Braylons Butte…

May 15th, 2014 at 2:50 PM ^

Some early hype on Stauskas from ESPN

http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/draft2014/story/_/id/10930456/nik-stauska...

Chad Ford highlights a workout done with Stauskas, McDermott, and Payne, among others, and how Stauskas was really impressive. 

Key section:"Stauskas is making a play to be more than just a shooter, and the early returns look really good. He was absolutely terrific in the ballhandling drills he was put through on Tuesday.

Stauskas told me he grew up playing point guard until a late growth spurt moved him to the 2. While he wasn't a primary ballhandler at Michigan, he showed the ability to initiate the offense this past season. Based on what I saw in drills, I think he's got a chance to get into the conversation with Marcus Smart and Tyler Ennis. He isn't a pure point guard, but neither is Smart. And his ability to shoot off the bounce means he's going to have the ball in his hands a lot, regardless of what position he plays.

We have Stauskas ranked No. 12 on our Big Board, and if teams are convinced that Stauskas can play some point, he could end up passing Ennis on draft night."

Ziff72

May 15th, 2014 at 2:56 PM ^

Based on todays Grantland article about Van Gundy I think the odds the Pistons draft Stauskas has gone way up.  If Stauskas athleticism checks out I think he's staying here.  We need someone to space the floor badly and Stauskas would be the perfect complement to Drummond.   

Van Gundy stresses

-No gambling on D,  play position defense.(sounds similar to a system we're familiar with)

- Floor spacing on offense- Hmmm

- Utilize the 3-Ding ding ding

With the 8th selection the Detroit Pistons select from Michigan.... 

SanDiegoWolverine

May 15th, 2014 at 3:26 PM ^

6'9" without shoes with that standing reach and wingspan is plenty big enough to player center in the league and is better than Dwight Howard and compares favorably to a lot current starting centers. If GM's think he can play PF and C then I bit he moves into the lottery by the end of this process. He can be and inside-outside guy like Sheed and play both positions like him as well. If the Pistons had another pick in the teens this is exactly the kind of guys you want on the team to play the kind of offense Van Gundy wants to play. A three man big rotation of Drummond, Monroe, and Payne would be excellent if they could trade J-Smoove for a wing that could shoot.

BLHoke

May 15th, 2014 at 5:13 PM ^

Thanks for posting that video of Nick, I hadn't seen it yet and it has upped my faith in him as a pro prospect. Obviously we all know he can shoot (Steph Curry challenged him to a 3 pt contest after his ridiculous drill in the rain went viral.), so he'll likely always find a roster spot to space the floor no matter what... But in that video he's shown drastic improvements in areas that would occasionally frustrate me during this last season. First is his ball handling... It's not that he was careless or incapable overall, it just seemed like a lot of times when he was trying to use it to create space, it was a bit slow and telegraphed. He was so much faster and nimble in this video. I realize there wasn't a defender in his path trying to disrupt his rhythm or take the ball, but it's still encouraging just the same. The other thing is his overall athleticism, which I must own up to being wrong about. I know he can dunk, but aside from a couple hard two hand throw downs, he always struck me as more of a rim grazer... I know it wasn't on a Vince Carter level win the elevation, power or style points... But executing an East Bay Funk dunk off of your own lob/bounce is an extremely athletic play for anybody to make, which is why that dunk usually gets a perfect score in any contest no matter how many times we see it. I considered myself pretty athletic in my younger days, always one of the fastest kids on the football and basketball teams, but I never had great jumping ability. Had I made better choices when I was younger, I likely would have gotten a scholarship to play at a small local D-II school. Anyway, all of us that love basketball but can't jump, we've all fooled around with our adjustable hoops in the driveway or back yard, lowering the rim to around 8.5-9 FT having make shift dunk contests pretending to be all our favorite players... At those heights, I could recreate almost any popular dunk from dunk contests past, expect for a FT line dunk, or the EBFD. I'm short and my strengths as a player were shooting and ball handling, so I had great hand eye coordination and and quick hands/reaction time. Seeing him do that, while I no it's not relevant to an actual game as far as happening, makes me optimistic that he has bigger possibilities and more of a variety of potential roles entering the league. Like a 1st or 2nd option as a scorer in the right system, or possibly even playing PG. With his familiarity of the position pre growth spurt, if he could develop a quick first step to get into the lane regularly when opposing guards try to fight over screens and get to the line, he'll be deadly between that and when they make the mistake of going underneath and leaving him wide open for a jumper. Plus a 6'6" PG can shoot over guys in the 6'1" to 6'3" range, along with posting them up. We all know he takes care of the ball and makes great decisions when running an offense.

Victor Valiant

May 15th, 2014 at 5:27 PM ^

Patric Young from Florida came in a bit taller than I expected. I assumed he was just a buff 6'6 type guy similar to Ben Wallace. 6'10 in shoes is a solid 3 inches taller than I expected to see. Neither here nor there though. GRIII and Nik measured well and should be moving up boards as we speak due to workouts and measurements. Also, guys knocking Vonleh because he measured 6'8 without shoes are crazy. That's pretty standard for the PF position. He'll be 6'9.5 with shoes and has a freakishly long wing span at 7'4.25. If anything his measurements helped him, not hurt him.

Mr. Yost

May 15th, 2014 at 8:10 PM ^

/JayBilasVoice

The "wingspan" drinking game during the NBA Draft has become a staple. You'll always hear him say "Tip it back America" after he says it the first time.

umichjenks

May 15th, 2014 at 9:38 PM ^

Brendan F. Quinn @BFQuinn
Doug McDermott said Nik Stauskas is "one of the best I've seen" off the dribble. The two have been working out in Chicago for a few weeks.