Consensus among draft sites =/= Consensus among NBA team talent evaluators
Or do we need to go through every instance in this draft where the draftnik sites got it very wrong?
Skal, just to give one example, was listed as a lottery pick all the way up to the day of the draft. Deyonta Davis was regularly slotted in the 10-15 range.
Where'd they get selected?
Everyone understands that, but they are much more connected then you and I, especially certain guys like Ford, Woj, etc.
Most assuredly, but I think it's clear that even with their connections, they are still working with an incomplete picture, and teams are often feeding them misinformation for their own purposes.
This year's draft seemed an especially bad one for the draftnik sites. The real draft was all over the place compared to the mocks.
To act as if the draftnik mocks, or Chad Ford's tiers, are more indicative of what NBA teams thought of the players' value on draft night than the draft itself, is just plain silly.
But that is the point Boston took Brown at 3, what if Boston traded the pick to Philly who took Dunn, then where does Brown go? It only takes one team to like someone, the question is, did other teams rate Brown that highly? I don't think that is the case. I think Brown falls out of the top 5 if Boston didn't take him, and he easily could have fallen all the way to 8 where Boston might have had the pieces to move up and take him there.
I'm pretty confident that one of Phoenix, Minnesota, or Denver would have taken Brown if the Celts hadn't taken him and Dunn were off the board.
I can't say for sure whether the Celts valued Brown a lot more highly than other teams, but I tend to think not.
For me to think that, I'd have to believe there were other factors at play that didn't have to do with a guy's strengths and weaknesses.
Example -- with Terry Rozier, I felt that Danny reached on him (i.e. took him 5-10 spots higher than he probably would have gone otherwise) because Danny has certain types of prospects he is comfortable projecting to the NBA -- of which Terry is an example -- and last year's draft was pretty soft and deep in the middle.
The other example that comes to mind is Yabusele. There, again, I think Danny went for one of his "types," and on top of that, I think the Celts were keen to get draft-and-stash candidates with their 2nd and 3rd first round picks. My guess is that Yabu was a bit of a reach.
Of course, in neither of those instances do I know for certain that they were "reaches." I can only speculate. I don't think mock drafts can do much to clarify the situation beyond a rough idea of where prospects were expected to go in the draft by people not in a position to actually make the final decisions.
With Brown, I think the pros and cons are fairly obvious, and I don't think it would take a certain kind of GM to want to draft him in the top 10. It comes down to whether the red flags in his game are big enough to make you overly pessimistic about his ability to become an above average starting caliber player at the NBA level.
Since the Celts took a chance on him with the 3rd pick in the draft, leaving on the board a more polished player who probably would have been a more valuable trade chip during the off-season, I tend to assume that from an NBA evaluator's perspective, those red flags weren't too ominous.