- Mar 22, 2003
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Josh Hart HAS been the comparison I’ve seen for the last two years on Bronny. He doesn’t shoot it like Hart (40% this season) yet
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With the types of guys who get picked in the late lotto and flame out regularly, getting a Josh Hart at the back of the lotto should be considered a win in most draftsAlso, Givony comped Bronny to Josh Hart with a potential ceiling of Jrue Holiday if everything goes right.
Said Josh Hart probably isn’t the name you’d normally want to hear out of a lotto pick, but in this draft, if you can get a role player that you know can impact winning, it should be considered a win in THIS draft.
I don’t think he’s a high level NBA prospect no matter how long he stays …He can make the league and get on rosters if he figures it out tho based on pedigree and suchpmatic not sure how much you have seen Amari but he needs to stay - really hope he does
Honestly when I read the latest scouting reports and watch the clips, Bronny sounds like Alex Caruso. More offensive pop though.
Bronny can D up like Melton, but I think Melton is way more aggressive looking for his shot.DeAnthony Melton is the most accurate comparison I've seen. Guys like Caruso/Hart have about 3 inches on him.
Bronny can D up like Melton, but I think Melton is way more aggressive looking for his shot.
I forgot Caruso is 6'5 barefoot.
I don’t think he’s a high level NBA prospect no matter how long he stays …He can make the league and get on rosters if he figures it out tho based on pedigree and such
I’m not up on his athleticism but Maybe Bronny can compare to a GP II ?When you consider the fact that we're talking about the one and done prospects of a 6'2 combo guard that projects to be a role player....it really does accentuate how absurd this conversation is and what Givony's intent really was
This should be the pistons last tank year, Spurs just starting a rebuild so they in talent acquisition mode and the Raptors gotta start their rebuild by selling off some piecesWhat should the Detroit Pistons, San Antonio Spurs, and Toronto Raptors do from here?
Honestly when I read the latest scouting reports and watch the clips, Bronny sounds like Alex Caruso. More offensive pop though.
Seems like this kid is gaining traction.
Hollinger:
I haven’t seen Bufkin yet on many draft lists, but he absolutely needs to be in there. And not at the bottom.
The sophomore guard has thrown off scouts’ radar a bit because he’s not a one-and-done, but he might as well be. Bufkin hardly played as a freshman but was also one of the youngest freshmen in the country; with a September 2003 birthdate, he is actually a week younger than likely one-and-done teammate Howard, as well as a few other college freshmen who will be in this draft.
Bufkin has also been productive, arguably even more so than the two more heralded prospects on the floor on Sunday in Michigan’s 77-69 win over Ohio State. Bufkin was the best player on the floor in Ann Arbor, with 13 points, eight rebounds and five assists … just three days after posting a 15-12-8 line in a win over Northwestern.
Here’s a coast-to-coast take after a defensive board in which the southpaw uses a transition screen and gets to the cup going right, although he still felt compelled to finish lefty.
His shot release, a looping lefty sling, could use some fine-tuning; he’s at 30.3 percent from 3 this year. He gets a really nice arc on the ball, and it looks a lot better from a standstill (in a related story, he’s made 81.5 percent from the line), but getting all the parts of his wind-up aligned while he’s on the move is problematic.
There is other developmental fruit still hanging off the tree. Bufkin has a slender, 175-pound body that still needs to fill out a little and long arms that offer promise of some defensive upside. (His feet seemed meh on Sunday, but I need to take a deeper dive.) He can jump too, with some serious rebounds in traffic on Sunday. Here’s 6-7 Justice Sueing challenging Bufkin on the block and eating a leather sandwich:
Positionally, Bufkin profiles as a combo guard, but some point guard instincts have come out at times. While not nominally the Michigan point guard, he made some sharp hit-ahead passes on Sunday and showed the ability to push in transition. If he can play point guard full-time at 6-4, that’s obviously a big edge.
Overall, Bufkin looked every bit of a first-rounder. The shot is still a concern, and teams will want to see him sustain this burst of success over the final month of the season, but Bufkin seems to be playing himself off “sleeper” lists and onto the main board.