At very worst he's .... a 6'11, super athletic pf/c.
No, at very worst he's a 6'11", super athletic pf/c that isn't anywhere good enough to play NBA basketball that we would have to pay for 2 years minimum.
Well, and if you buy the draft camp numbers, he isn't so "super athletic". He tested as a solid athlete, but not what he was billed as.
At very worst he's .... a 6'11, super athletic pf/c.
No, at very worst he's a 6'11", super athletic pf/c that isn't anywhere good enough to play NBA basketball that we would have to pay for 2 years minimum.
But isn't there enough examples of guys who are just that, and only that, who have been in the league for years getting regular rotational minutes? The Heat just made it to the finals starting one, the Mavericks got big minutes out of another guy just like that (Mianhimi)
Mahinihi (or whatever his name) was a disappointment for the Spurs, and even if you call his few minutes in the finals a success story, the draft pick didn't pay off for the team who drafted him.
Joel Anthony may have gone undrafted, but he had a much stronger resume than Tyler coming out of college (he was Mountain West defensive player of the year).
It is incredibly rare when a player like this is able to not only become a good NBA player, but do it for the team that drafted them. Other than Perkins, Ibaka, and DeAndre Jordan (who again, had a much stronger resume than Tyler), I can't think of anyone else who has come from having such a short book on them, other than being tall and athletic, to being a quality NBA player.
But again, this is the time to swing for the fences, so go get him Danny.