I think his greatest strength ( which also happens to be Fab's greatest weakness) is he has soft hands. The ball just seems to be attracted to his mitts. Rebound vanish, he has a knack for coming up with the ball.
Jared Sullinger may not be 7 feet tall but he posseses a giant's mindset. Given the right coaching we could have the best all around player from the draft and a top 10 PF/C.
Again, blatant homerism and wishful thinking. Mindset will only take you so far. I am a tall guy and little guy with a mindset to take it to the hole usually ended up with a blocked shot. I do think he has willed himself to be a great college player. I think he will be a good NBA player but the best in his class is insane. Damian Lillard is a lot better offensively than Sully. Anthony Davis is a better defender and rebounder.
I hear you and thanks for the response. I definitely admit to some blatant homerism in that post, that was written in hour 12 of a 13 hour shift and I kind of get a bit loopy toward the end.
But I will not throw out best player in this class quite yet. Damien Lillard was drafted into the perfect situation, a young team where he could start and already featuring top 6-8 PF. How much better will he become though. He has average measurements for point guard and has done so well thus far, where is the room for improvement? I'd argue that Sullinger's defensive potential gives him a higher ceiling and it will show when he becomes our unquestioned starting big man.
I am one of Anthony Davis' biggest fans. I love the idea of a fringe prospect shooting up in height, retaining his guard skills and rising to dominance. Sports Illustrated ran an excellent article about how his offense projects to be something like Tyson Chandler with handle and a jump shot. A fine player but it's a bit premature to automatically anoint him a better rebounder.
Honestly it's an awkward thing to talk about but Sullinger has quite possibly the best butt since Charles Barkley. He has he ability to create space and box out against taller longer players much in the same way Sir Charles did by throwing his posterior out to allot himself enough space to either coralle a rebound or let loose a shot.
Finally on offense he just has an ease about him. He simply knows how to use his body to score and I can think of no better explanation than David Thorpe at about 26:00 into this podcast. He considered Sully to be the best offensive play in the draft and I can't say that I disagree.
http://espn.go.com/espnradio/play?id=8112547I don't think David even realized his potential as a position defender though. Again that is where I really see Sully pulling away from his peers and yes becoming the best player from this draft class.