I don't get how Giannis was the obvious choice when there were questions at the time about his age (especially in a post-Bismack draft), his eventual position in the NBA, and the quality of his competition. Calling Giannis the safer pick is pure revisionist history.
Frankly, I still wonder what Giannis' career is going to look like. Unless he can develop a consistent 15-footer, he's going to be . . . what, exactly? A rich man's Hakim Warrick? The next Jonathan Bender?
http://vorped.com/1-nba/2014-2015/player/1529/giannis-antetokounmpo/shotchart/
and what is Kelly's? A no defense 7 ft shooting guard?
You do realize that Olynyk has the same defensive rating over his career as Giannis, right?
Regardless, in a league that is accentuating more and more the concept of pace and space, it seems like Olynyk has a base skillset that should translate to a rotational role for him in the NBA. I expect him to be a decent bench big man. Considering where he was drafted, that's not [dang]ing him with faint praise.
This is where analytics come up short, imo. It's not all about numbers. Have you actually seen Giannis play defense? He swatted a KD layup his rookie year, after trailing the play, that looked like that famous clip of Rodman stuffing Pippen in the 1988 playoffs, iirc. If you do want numbers, however, try this - as a WING, Giannis is averaging 6.9 rpg and 1.1 bpg. The last stat is the most eye-opening one, imo, especially when comparing him to Nolynyk, who, at 7'0", doesn't even average one block per game. Giannis and KJ McDaniels would have given us better shot blocking than any of our big guys, but we are where we are. Ugh. I refuse to use the term 'rim protection,' btw, as it sounds hilariously dumb to me, lol.
