Seems generous.
Boston Celtics: C+
Round 1: Hugo Gonzalez (No. 28)
Round 2: Amari Williams(No. 46), Max Shulga (No. 57)
Gonzalez would have made more sense for Boston as a stash pick who would come over later in his development. Instead, Brad Stevens indicated the Celtics plan to bring him to the NBA next season.
On the broadcast, Gonzalez was compared to Denver Nuggets wing Christian Braun. One key difference: Braun, though not thought of as a shooter, hit 38% of his 3s in college. Gonzalez shot 27% at Real Madrid.
Williams is an intriguing prospect with multiple strengths as a rebounder, rim protector and facilitator at the elbow. However, he shot just 54% career on 2s, very poor for a center who doesn't stretch the floor. Shulga, the last of Boston's three picks, projected best in my model because of his 39% career 3-point shooting.
Here's the thing with drafts - the GM's who get paid big bucks whiff on picks all the time. How much credibility do these alleged pundits have? If they were that good at projecting where these guys are going to be in 3 or 4 years, they'd be on some team's payroll. I would take any draft evaluation with a grain of salt.
So far Brad's had a couple of drafts. Walsh is an incomplete (though not looking great), Scheirmann looks like a pretty good pick (though again, it's too early to tell). So the jury is still out. Most guys you take in the 2nd round - like just about every player on the end of an NBA bench or in the G League - has one or two legit NBA skills. Whether they make it or not will depend on how much they improve and develop new skills.
When he was at Butler, Brad was terffic at finding under the radar guys who turned into good college players. As a coach with the C's, he was excellent at developing players - classic example being getting Evan Turner (considered a draft bust) $70 milion from Portland. I'd say let's hold off evaluating his drafts for the time being and see how these guys develop.