Here you go re Langford from Zach Lowe ESPN Insider:
6-6 wing | No. 14 pick in 2019 | 21.4 years old
Langford remains a mystery of sorts to NBA evaluators given his myriad injuries and lack of production over the course of his brief career. One of the top players in his 2018 high school class, Langford played through a torn ligament in his right thumb for the majority of his freshman season at Indiana. He has been sidelined for this entire NBA season after undergoing wrist surgery in September.
Given the laundry list of injuries (thumb, wrist, groin, knee, ankle), it's hard to fully gauge what type of NBA player Langford can become. He's also on a team in which its two best players (Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown) are wings, and who drafted two more (Aaron Nesmith and Payton Pritchard) in 2020.
Langford shot just 43% from 2 and 21% from 3 in 416 total NBA minutes last season, but teams were high on him throughout the pre-draft process. They could potentially offer the Celtics a veteran to contribute to Boston's playoff push. Langford doesn't turn 22 until October and still has quite a bit of talent at his disposal.
Langford's shaky shooting stroke has long been his kryptonite, but watching him knock down pull-up 3 after pull-up 3 against Jaren Jackson Jr. in high school makes you wonder how much of his shooting woes have been a product of thumb and wrist issues.
An effortless right-hand driver who was one of the best wing finishers in college basketball at Indiana, Langford glides with the ball in his hands and has the makings of a bench scorer who also has the tools to defend multiple positions when fully engaged. Situational factors aside, I always projected Langford as more of a long-term prospect, and a non-playoff team with development minutes to spare would be wise to see if they can tap into the talent that made him a prep star in Indiana at such a young age.