By the way (not that I don't know this will immediately be bashed because it's John Hillinger), but here's ESPN's scouting report of Mbah a Moute for those who haven't had the opportunity to see him play much:
2008-09 season: Welcome to the most amazing story from last season that absolutely nobody talked about. It's rare for a rookie to enter the league and defend competently right away; what Mbah a Moute did went several steps beyond that.
An unheralded second-round draft pick who wasn't expected to play much, Mbah a Moute was one of the best defensive players in the whole league last season. His versatility as a defender was stunning, as he guarded every spot on the floor -- he checked Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol in the same game, for instance -- and it's no surprise the Bucks gave up 4.9 points less per 100 possessions with him on the court.
Mbah a Moute was the biggest reason Milwaukee improved from one of the worst defensive teams to the middle of the NBA pack despite losing its two best players to injury and basically playing without a center for the final two months of the season. For a rookie perimeter player to do this is virtually unprecedented.
Not that anyone noticed. Because he had no previous reputation and Milwaukee is basketball Siberia, he received no votes for the All-Defense team from the league's P.R. directors, er, coaches. This ranks as one of the greatest outrages in recent award vote history. To put this in perspective, 41 different players received votes for the All-Defense team last year, including David Lee, J.R. Smith, Yao Ming and Travis Outlaw. Mbah a Moute was better than at least half of them, and that's being conservative. At some point it will become so obvious that even people outside Milwaukee will have to notice.
As for the rest of his game, Mbah a Moute didn't really do much offensively, averaging just 11.2 points per 40 minutes, but he did a strong job on the glass and earned himself some easy putbacks that way.
Scouting report: Mbah a Moute isn't really a guard or a forward; they should just list his position as "defender." He's 6-9 with long arms, great quickness and the intensity to shut down opponents. Because Mbah a Moute's college coach, UCLA's Ben Howland, is such an advanced defensive expert, Mbah a Moute entered the league with far more knowledge of how to defend than most rookies. He has quick hands, too, and gets his hands on a lot of balls without ever needing to gamble.
As a perimeter defender, he stayed glued to his man, but Milwaukee used him at the 4 often and he was great against pick-and-rolls in that situation because he could switch everything and swallow up the opposing guard. Although he has a light frame, he handled most post-up 4s pretty well too; once he learns the art of flopping he'll get even better at this.