Been thinking about the draft some more and will write my notes here…
The age question
Do the Spurs care about age at this point? During the years they were contending, they did not care for it all and drafted older prospects. However, the past decade has been them drafting 20 year old and under prospects. My belief is that they drafted for youth due to their circumstance - they did not have enough upper tier talent on their team, and needed to gamble. Now the situation’s changed, do they go for safer prospects now who are older?
The importance of shooting
Very important! I think with the departure of Sochan and the current rotation, it’s loud and clear that Mitch wants some shooting ability from 1-4 going forward. In the past, I personally did not place as much value in shooting as others did but that changes this year - showing signs of shooting ability is a must for me to seriously consider them as prospects to be drafted by the Spurs. Now, I will not overcorrect and look for shooting-only prospects who offer nothing else in their skillset. I still maintain my principle of having more than one skill is a non-negotiable. Carter Bryant (who I was not high on last year) at least had reputation for being a good defender. Some of the names being thrown around as faves don’t have that reputation: Karim Lopez, Nate Ament. That makes me feel like it’s unlikely they’ll be drafted by the Spurs.
The character question
The Spurs are under a new regime now… do they still care about character? I posted this in the Sochan thread - I think they very much do. I’ve been watching interviews of every prospect and taking notes of who speaks like a Spur and doesn’t show any signs of having a major ego.
I think they still go young with a higher pick for a couple reasons -
1. Spurs are looking for inefficiencies in the draft market. Years ago, it was euro players but the league caught on. A few years ago when the Spurs drafted Primo, I remember someone (not sure whether it was actually Brian Wright or just a random poster) talking about "pre-drafting" prospects - toolsy guys with bad counting stats who would likely be drafted much higher if they stayed on another year. I think they still view this as an inefficiency in the draft market and will continue to try and tap this pipeline if possible, whether that's the right answer or not. They look for very young guys with high level physical tools on really good teams usually dominated by vets. The fact that they can play a role on a vet-heavy team gives you confidence that they can subjugate their game for the team when they get to the next level. The fact that they have high-level physical tools gives them upside to grow. You want a very young (under 20) prospect to give them a long runway for growth. For this reason, even though I personally like Cam Carr as a draft prospect, I think there's absolutely zero chance the Spurs end up actually drafting him because he already demonstrated that he would not be a role player for a veteran-heavy team at Tennessee.
2. Now that their core is established, I think they want to develop their leadership skills. Wemby, Harper, Castle - they want them to become the leaders of this team in the long term. Bringing in 22-24 year old guys who are older, regardless of their character, might undermine some of that, as it'd be sort of weird to bring in a rookie who's actually older and has more life experience than the core leaders of your team. They might bring in true vets in FA or trade, but those represent a more supportive environment to help your team grow, rather than mature rookies who might disrupt the infrastructure of your young core leadership. As that core gets older and more entrenched, I think it's then more likely that you'll see the Spurs draft older prospects.
This is why I think Cenac has a strong possibility of getting drafted, as he checks all the boxes:
- outstanding physical tools (center sized, moves like a power forward; for example, compare him to Jalen Smith who looks similar on paper but is both smaller and moves less well on the perimeter)
- super young (19.3 on draft day)
- plays a significant role for one of the two toughest and most exacting coaches in the NCAA, who has also lauded his work ethic
- when you watch him shoot, his jumper looks more like that of a smaller player; I think he's a got excellent potential to shoot
This is probably the Carter Bryant of this year's draft