Man, I have no idea how good he's actually going to be as a pro, but purely from a needs standpoint Yaxel checks literally every box that you want for a PF next to Wemby which is why I think I've got some blinders on when it comes to his faults
PF ideal needs:
- 6'9-6'11" with positive wingspan - measured 6'8.5" no shoes with 7'4 wingspan at the combine
- Secondary rim protection - played center for UAB 2 years ago and recorded a 7.3% BLK%; playing wing this year and still recording 5% BLK%
- Switchability - routinely defends at the perimeter as a wing this year
- Rebounding - 11.6/26 OREB%/DREB% during his 2 years at UAB playing center and point forward, which are excellent but not elite figures; at 7/18 this year playing on the perimeter with the biggest frontcourt in the country
- Big wing defense - this one is a bit of an known - will have to see how he does vs other high level wings throughout the year
- Shooting - Career 79% FT shooter; shooting 41% on 9 3PA/100 this year
Basically, he went through the exact same thing that Jeremy Sochan did the last 3 years - 2 years ago he played center, last year he played point forward, and this year he's playing big wing. Except instead of failing at every step, he seems to be succeeding at every step, just against much lower competition at an older age. He's up to almost 3:1 AST:TO and has maintained his elite STL/BLK combination even against high level competition. He's got the highest impact metrics of any player in the country this year and the only player close is 18 year old Cam Boozer. Yesterday when he decided to finally assert himself against Maryland after Michigan got down, he absolutely took them apart and ended up with a 29/8/9/3/2 on 73/80/100 shooting in an 18 point win. Before that, he was happily blending into the background putting up mediocre counting stats on elite efficiency as Michigan was blowing out top 25 teams by 30-40.
Like, I realize the track record for >23 year olds in the draft is absolutely horrendous. Chris Duarte is the example that always gets brought up, but even more recently, dudes like Dalton Knecht, Baylor Scheierman, Terrence Shannon Jr, Nique Clifford, and Kobe Brown have all looked like varying levels of ass after getting drafted. Of the two guys who look like success stories, Cam Johnson is a high level role player. Tristan da Silva looks like he's on his way to being a decent role player. And that's really it.
To his credit, 23 year old Yaxel laps every other 23 year old who has ever been drafted from a productivity standpoint and according to pretty much every metric:
https://www.tankathon.com/players/c...a-silva--terrence-shannon-jr--cameron-johnson
There is also the possibility that he can be even better since he has only been seriously playing organized basketball for something like 6 years, giving him outs for a Pascal Siakam-like late development trajectory.
My primary concern for Yaxel is that 1) He does not really pop on tape - he sort of just does everything within the flow of the offense and I don't know how that translates when he's going up against guys who are more athletic than him and 2) His athleticism seems to be suboptimal, as he recorded only a 31 inch max vert with mediocre combine testing and low dunk numbers every season. I don't think he will be a complete bust, but there is a decent chance that he will only become something like an Obi Toppin with better feel but worse athleticism.
I really can't quit this guy though, even dating back to middle of last season when he was at UAB, because I can't see too many other guys that check every box that the Spurs need. I was high on CMB last year for his high level defense, rebounding, and feel, but his shooting was a major question mark. PJ Washington is the only guy in the league who checks most of the above boxes and is on a reasonable contract. Those two February games against Purdue and Duke are going to be a real benchmark to see if he can continue to dominate.