Author Topic: 2025 CB Historical Draft - Player Analysis  (Read 40 times)

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2025 CB Historical Draft - Player Analysis
« on: Today at 11:36:06 AM »

Online Who

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I do know if there is interest in this topic but I thought it would be interesting to have a thread devoted to individual player analysis who were picked in this draft. How people viewed / rated different players. Particularly players who are more polarizing.

Some suggestions:

* Luka Doncic, James Harden
* Slow mid 00s centers like Shaq, Yao
* offensive PGs like Nash, Steph, Lillard
* no offense centers like Gobert, Big Ben
* McGrady, Vince
* Porzingis, Wemby
* Jokic - how his value differs on super-team vs reg team
* Duncan - I might be alone on this one
* Kobe
* Comparison of Tatum, PG13, Pierce, Jimmy B
* Comparison of Ray, Klay, Ant, B Roy, Manu

Whatever other names pique people's interest. Or wish to get a broader view of how others valued them in the draft.

Not intended to attack or defend a guy. Just how you viewed that player in the draft. To see the differences in how people think about different players.
« Last Edit: Today at 11:41:27 AM by Who »

Re: 2025 CB Historical Draft - Player Analysis
« Reply #1 on: Today at 11:59:51 AM »

Online Who

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Okay, I am going to do a Tim Duncan one.

In those Duncan vs KG debates I felt the main advantages Duncan had over KG were (1) prototypical big man vs unorthodox big man (2) Duncan more willing to be go-to scorer in the low post.

I find Duncan's scoring interesting. He lacks the overwhelming athletic advantages of other stars. The insane quickness, agility and athleticism of a Hakeem Olajuwon. The overwhelming size and power of Shaq. The height, length and grace of Kareem to play over the top with his sky-hook. Or a speedy athletic PF like Giannis. Duncan never had those gifts.

Instead, Duncan relied on having a versatile offensive arsenal. I always think of one the Lakers playoff games in the early 00s. Doug Collins was commentator. Duncan had something like 40pts in this game. Collins points out how every basket Duncan made was different. Different spots. Different moves. That is how Duncan was able to be so effective. He lacked the overwhelming physical advantage to constantly do the same thing (like Shaq or Kareem) but made up for it with versatility. That gave him scoring resilience. Allowed him to be consistent against a variety of defenders.

Okay ...

So back to a draft like this. I wonder about 2 things with Duncan.

(1) go-to scoring = I don't think his go-to scoring is efficient enough / effective enough to demand the ball as often in this setting as on his regular Spurs teams. I see him more as a facilitator who scores within the flow of the offense while creating space for others. More similar to how Duncan played in 2010-15 when the offense ran through T Parker and Ginobili than in 2000-05 when it ran through Duncan in the post. Only with a younger more athletic Timmy.

(2) Defensive quality of opponents. I think the opponents can bother Timmy's offense more than others. I do not see him as a top tier scorer. Like I said above, the lack of elite athleticism. Top defenders could bother Timmy more than they could bother a Shaq. So in a setting like this where Timmy has to play huge centers like Shaq, Yao, or Marc Gasol. Even Jokic. Or top defenders like Dwight, Big Ben, the length of Gobert. I don't think Timmy can create offense / shot creation as well as he could in the regular NBA.

So I view Duncan as losing a good chunk of that go-to scoring advanage he had. I thought that advantage elevated him over the other stars of his era. Like Roy said in one his posts during the draft, Timmy was the best player of his era. Not KG. Not Kobe. Timmy was. I agree with that. But I also think he loses some of that edge in this type of setting.

I still had Duncan rated as my top center in this draft due to his all-round game and his value as an anchor / facilitator. The defense, rebounding, passing, midrange scoring, interior scoring. But I didn't value him as the clear cut best player of his era. I thought he would lose some of the edge his scoring gave him in the real NBA compared to the competition he would face in this Historical League.

Re: 2025 CB Historical Draft - Player Analysis
« Reply #2 on: Today at 12:36:23 PM »

Offline Celtic Fan Forever

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Okay, I am going to do a Tim Duncan one.

In those Duncan vs KG debates I felt the main advantages Duncan had over KG were (1) prototypical big man vs unorthodox big man (2) Duncan more willing to be go-to scorer in the low post.

I find Duncan's scoring interesting. He lacks the overwhelming athletic advantages of other stars. The insane quickness, agility and athleticism of a Hakeem Olajuwon. The overwhelming size and power of Shaq. The height, length and grace of Kareem to play over the top with his sky-hook. Or a speedy athletic PF like Giannis. Duncan never had those gifts.

Instead, Duncan relied on having a versatile offensive arsenal. I always think of one the Lakers playoff games in the early 00s. Doug Collins was commentator. Duncan had something like 40pts in this game. Collins points out how every basket Duncan made was different. Different spots. Different moves. That is how Duncan was able to be so effective. He lacked the overwhelming physical advantage to constantly do the same thing (like Shaq or Kareem) but made up for it with versatility. That gave him scoring resilience. Allowed him to be consistent against a variety of defenders.

Okay ...

So back to a draft like this. I wonder about 2 things with Duncan.

(1) go-to scoring = I don't think his go-to scoring is efficient enough / effective enough to demand the ball as often in this setting as on his regular Spurs teams. I see him more as a facilitator who scores within the flow of the offense while creating space for others. More similar to how Duncan played in 2010-15 when the offense ran through T Parker and Ginobili than in 2000-05 when it ran through Duncan in the post. Only with a younger more athletic Timmy.

(2) Defensive quality of opponents. I think the opponents can bother Timmy's offense more than others. I do not see him as a top tier scorer. Like I said above, the lack of elite athleticism. Top defenders could bother Timmy more than they could bother a Shaq. So in a setting like this where Timmy has to play huge centers like Shaq, Yao, or Marc Gasol. Even Jokic. Or top defenders like Dwight, Big Ben, the length of Gobert. I don't think Timmy can create offense / shot creation as well as he could in the regular NBA.

So I view Duncan as losing a good chunk of that go-to scoring advanage he had. I thought that advantage elevated him over the other stars of his era. Like Roy said in one his posts during the draft, Timmy was the best player of his era. Not KG. Not Kobe. Timmy was. I agree with that. But I also think he loses some of that edge in this type of setting.

I still had Duncan rated as my top center in this draft due to his all-round game and his value as an anchor / facilitator. The defense, rebounding, passing, midrange scoring, interior scoring. But I didn't value him as the clear cut best player of his era. I thought he would lose some of the edge his scoring gave him in the real NBA compared to the competition he would face in this Historical League.

TP, Who, for the great analysis as always. This was the first time I ever took Timmy in one of these. And while ideally I would have wanted the 2003 version of him, I was still happy to build around him because of his leadership, two way impact, and selflessness. I thought he was the perfect guy to pair with any type of players around him and someone I would not have to worry about needing touches. I strongly considered Curry or Jokic, knowing Lebron would likely be the 1st overall pick. But at the end of the day I wanted the anchor on defense rather than the game changing offense, as I felt I could get more of that later on.

I hear your concern regarding Timmy getting his offensively in a league like this. But I would never need a 30-40 point explosion with him. Between the scoring of Pierce, Ray, Chris Paul, and even Bosh would be enough. I think the versatility of Duncan on both ends, and his ability to flawlessly play off other stars and do the little things- screening, rebounding, communication- made him the perfect guy to build around in any exercise.
2025 CelticsStrong Historical Draft Orlando Magic:
PG: Chris Paul, Fred VanVleet
SG: Ray Allen, OG Anunoby, Zach Lavine
SF: Paul Pierce, Gordon Hayward
PF: Chris Bosh, Serge Ibaka, David West
C: Tim Duncan, Andrew Bogut

Re: 2025 CB Historical Draft - Player Analysis
« Reply #3 on: Today at 12:39:04 PM »

Offline Donoghus

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To me, guys like Duncan, Lebron, Jokic, Dirk, & KG are pretty flawless in these things.  You have one of those guys and you're sitting golden to start.


2010 CB Historical Draft - Best Overall Team

Re: 2025 CB Historical Draft - Player Analysis
« Reply #4 on: Today at 01:13:04 PM »

Online Who

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Luka Doncic was a player I had trouble valuing.

Offense

I believe a lot of his value comes from being able to shoulder such a large chunk of the offense. To be a 30ppg 10apg threat. But in a setting like this, you do not need a player to shoulder as much.

Moreover, Luka is one of the most ball-dominant players I have ever seen. In a setting like this, how does he function with other stars? There is a lack of opportunities to see him on a team full of stars. At least with American players you can see them on Team USA in a competitive setting. Get an idea of how well they adapt to that. For Luka, he plays for Slovenia and plays the same high usage role he has in the NBA.

The only other opportunity is All-Star games. Present day ASGs are garbage and a bad example. Ones in the past were not a perfect illustration of how a player would do but they were a lot better than today's ASGs. More like a real basketball game. Even with that, what have we seen from Luka in ASGs? Nothing much. His game doesn't translate well to them. 7ppg 5.5apg in 23.5mpg 41% shooting 29% 3PT%. For a perennial MVP candidate, Luka has never given us a dominant All-Star showing. 

The other issue with Luka's offense is that he can shoulder large amounts and provide good offense while shoulder the load. But he doesn't provide great offense / high efficiency offense. His TS% was usually slightly above average. According to Bref.com his TS average is 101-106 vs league average of 100 for last 6 years. High efficiency guys are up in the 110-120 range. Guys like Durant or Steph. Luka's value over them is not his efficiency but that he shoulder an even larger chunk of the offense than those guys can. He can do more. Not as efficiently but more of it. That is less of an asset in this type of a setting where everyone can score / create.

Defense

Then there is the defense. Luka is likely the worst defensive SF in the draft. He can't defend guards. He is too slow. He could defend some of the PFs but not others. Maybe half of them.

--------------

I am curious how others thought of Luka in this draft. I know Roy was high on him. I think Luka was his #6 overall guy (why?). How did others value Luka and why?

Re: 2025 CB Historical Draft - Player Analysis
« Reply #5 on: Today at 01:57:46 PM »

Offline snively

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I shared some of Who's concerns about Luka but I really liked his size and bulk in this league. One thing I thought would be different in this league is size.  Teams would be bigger,  longer, and thus more physical. You wouldn't be able to get away with small ball. And I think Luka is better adapted to this kind of league.  Teams will play slower to accommodate the amount of offensive skill in the frontcourt. My issues with him on Mo's team was the scarcity of touches.

It's also why I wasn't as high on SGA (tho I still would have taken him over Kobe). I thought his lack of physical bulk and strength made him less suited to this league. That he would get beaten up and not hold up as the #1 option.





2025 Draft: Chicago Bulls

PG: Chauncey Billups/Deron Williams
SG: Kobe Bryant/Eric Gordon
SF: Jimmy Butler/Danny Granger/Danilo Gallinari
PF: Al Horford/Zion Williamson
C: Yao Ming/Pau Gasol/Tyson Chandler

Re: 2025 CB Historical Draft - Player Analysis
« Reply #6 on: Today at 02:07:18 PM »

Offline snively

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My favorite guy in this draft was Kawhi. Would have been tempted to take him #1. So good and versatile and committed defensively.  A super efficient scorer spotting up, coming off curls and in isolation. His big shortcoming - playmaking for others - I thought was a borderline positive in this league because it opened up a lot of opportunities for other stars. I also loved having his 2-way game against the most difficult match ups in this league - LeBron and KD. Someone who could make their lives difficult offensively and force them to play D.

I was very excited for the Wade/Kawhi duo. Wade as unstoppable explosive speed and power and playmaking and Kawhi next to him as the Terminator. Would have loved that as my foundation
2025 Draft: Chicago Bulls

PG: Chauncey Billups/Deron Williams
SG: Kobe Bryant/Eric Gordon
SF: Jimmy Butler/Danny Granger/Danilo Gallinari
PF: Al Horford/Zion Williamson
C: Yao Ming/Pau Gasol/Tyson Chandler