We end up with the #3 pick, or what seems to be the #1 Bridesmaid pick off the board. I am not too big a fan of Bender....plus I don't like the idea that he is not really NBA ready, when this team seems to need someone to step in right away in the backcourt as a shooter, and the front court as a rim protector/post-scorer.
I'm not saying Hield will be a bad pick at #3. If anything, he's probably one of the most NBA ready players....I just don't see him developing in to much more than he already is. Not a bad thing again, just not worth the #3 pick IMO.
Everyone else worth the pick (Dunn/Murray) would be backups (unless a trade is made), and you don't draft a backup #3 overall. I get that you take the BPA.
So that leaves Jaylen Brown, who honestly, reminds me a lot of another Brown we drafted a while back, of the Kedrick variety. Freak athlete, but more of an NBA Jam star and not an actual All-Star. If he had a consistent jumper, this would be a no-brainer. He comes in as a 6th/7th man to start, but could develop in to the starting SF over Crowder, and be a go-to scorer.
Too much uncertainty/speculation there, with all that said, with #3 overall. So, my question is (again, assuming the draft order stays as is), is the smart move to trade up in to the #1 or #2 spot to get Simmons or Ingram?
Personally, I would trade the entire rest of our draft to do so.
Are the Mavs pick, our early 20's pick, and our top two 2nd rounders enough to convince LA or Philly to part with the #1 or #2 pick? Is that an extreme overpay, or is it way off? Seems like it's a solid offer, not even looking at a draft-pick value chart.
Is this a stupid move, in the sense that it assumes Simmons/Ingram are locks at #1 and #2. All it takes is hearing the words, "Dragan Bender" called out when we are sitting at #3 to not have to worry about a thing.