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Devin’s NetsAreScorching Mock Draft 1.0

Replace “Georgia Tech” with “New Jersey” and next fall is closer than you think.

So… Hey guys. Remember that piece I did a week ago? About that Kentucky point guard who was pretty good? Please forget all of that. I hear he’s going to bust. He’s no good. Too turnover prone, too interested in highlight reels, and no amount of cleansing can get John Calipari’s stink off you.

Man, I wish I could believe that.

I was planning on doing an exciting, awesome mock draft where I could put the words “1. New Jersey: John Wall, PG, Kentucky,” and then just laugh jubilantly with the future of our team in mind. But alas, my dreams are for naught, lost in an alternate universe where having a 25% chance and the fact that the Washington franchise is a miserable excuse for a team with no future and who traded away their star player for peanuts at the deadline and had two players brought up on gun charges actually matters. Excuse me while I go shoot myself instead. Actually, Washington could help me with that. Anyone seen Gilbert around?

Anyway, without further ado, the first of my weekly updated mock drafts. You’ll be seeing a different one of these every Wednesday, and while the first couple will only be the top 14, by the end we’ll have expanded to the entire first round (and the Nets pick at 31).

1. Washington Wizards: John Wall, PG, Kentucky. I’m close to throwing my computer, but unfortunately for us Nets fans Wall is a perfect fit in Washington. They’re a team in dire need of a friendly face and a point guard who isn’t interested in guns. Plus, Wall is long enough to guard 2′s, which means that they can play him and Arenas together and not suffer on defense. After the lottery, I spent two hours thinking of potential trades that the Nets could offer (Yi+3+27 for 1? Harris+3 for 1+filler? 20% of Onexim for #1 and Javaris Crittenton’s criminal record?) but frankly I just don’t see it happening. Damnit, John Wall. I hope you enjoy four years being surrounded by mediocrity.

2. Philadelphia 76ers: Evan Turner, SG/SF, Ohio State. Just so we’re clear, there’s no doubt in my mind that Turner is the #2 player in this draft. These two picks are the easiest 1-and-2 since LeBron and Carmelo. (Wait, Carmelo wasn’t #2? Wait, who did Larry Brown take? Draco who? Whoops. We’ll just pretend that never happened.) The only issue with this is that the Sixers may be concerned with how Turner complements Andre Iguodala (a player with a similar skill set and half the potential upside), but honestly Philadelphia doesn’t seem sold on A.I. and Turner will likely end up a much better player. On the flip side, my friend David (a Philadelphia native) texted me this after the lottery: “If it makes you feel any better, Evan Turner is exactly the type of player that Sixers fans would run out of town for no good reason.” Right you are, David. Right you are.

3. New Jersey Nets: Derrick Favors, PF, Georgia Tech. A guy who fits all of Thorn’s qualifications, Favors is the biggest question mark of the top 4. Not because he’s not talented, but because unlike the other three we just don’t know how talented he is. Here’s what we do know: he’s got great size, great length, runs the floor like a deer, is an excellent defender at the college level, has a decent midrange game and can finish at the basket at an extremely high rate of efficiency. What we don’t know is just how well Favors can play with a backcourt that knows how to create for their bigs. (Sorry Iman Shumpert, but there’s a reason you’ll go undrafted. Well, actually, there are like 100. But that’s a big one.) Watching him struggle against teams like Duke & Georgia, it was clear that he wasn’t the problem. He was working his butt off, and somehow Georgia Tech failed to recruit one guy who can throw a decent entry pass or set up someone on the post effectively. Near the end of the season, Favors was finally able to break out, averaging 15.8 points and 9.1 boards on 64% shooting and 78% from the line over his last 10 games. None of this was thanks to his team. (I have dreams where i imagine Derrick Favors on Kentucky playing with John Wall and DeMarcus Cousins. That team would never lose. Ever. & yes, I dream about college basketball. I’m not weird, I swear.) I’d be happy with either Cousins or Favors here, but right now I think we’ll see Derrick in a Nets uniform next year.

4. Minnesota Timberwolves: PF/C DeMarcus Cousins, Kentucky. This team will HAVE to make a move. DeMarcus Cousins is the surefire #4 pick, but with Al Jefferson and Kevin Love already manning the 4 and 5 spots, someone’s got to go. Expect David Kahn to be scrambling at the deadline. Truthfully, he & Favors ould switch after the combine & workouts, where I expect Cousins to do better than expected. Cousins is here because of his great size, insane wingspan (7′-7″), mean streak (which has been overblown by the media into a weakness), and ridiculous offensive skillset – he’s more advanced in the offensive post than Shaq was in his freshman year at LSU. I don’t think DeMarcus is the next Shaq, though – he’s too much of a liability to get into foul trouble and Shaq absolutely dominated the SEC after his freshman year – but it’s a safe bet that Cousins is the next great big man to come out of the Southeastern.

5. Sacramento Kings: SF Wesley Johnson, Syracuse. The first five picks are all no-doubters in some order. Not as good as the top four, clearly better than the rest, Wes Johnson is (barring GM boneheadedness, which actually isn’t too unlikely) destined to be the #5 pick in this year’s draft. He’s a great scorer, but doesn’t draw contact much (or well). He’s a solid rebounder, but a poor passer. He took advantage of mismatches playing the PF position in college, but those mismatches will be gone in the NBA. His athleticism and length would give him a fair amount of upside, but he’s already 22 and will be 23 before tipoff 2010.
I could go on for a while, but I think I’ve made my point. Some people see his ceiling as a Shawn Marion-type player, and I don’t really agree with that – I think he’s much more explosive and has a better shot from midrange and distance. I don’t think he’ll ever be great, but he could certainly be a top-10 swingman in the NBA.

6. Golden State Warriors: Al-Farouq Aminu, SF/PF, Wake Forest. So we’re clear, I am NOT sold on this guy. But an athletic 3/4 tweener who runs the floor well with a questionable jump shot? Come on, they basically invented the Warriors so he could play for them. While other people see him succeeding, I have serious doubts. I think he’s too much of a tweener. He’s far too raw on both ends of the court and still relies too much on his inconsistent outside game. He certainly has talent – his body type is extremely coveted at the next level, especially by run-and-gunners like the Warriors – but I don’t think he’s going to turn into a Josh Smith-type player like some say he might. He could end up being a top-5 talent in this draft if he can harness his athletic ability, but I think he’s more likely to be the Jordan Hill of this draft.

7. Detroit Pistons: Cole Aldrich, C, Kansas. The Pistons have two centers: Kwame Brown and Old Ben Wallace. Ouch. I’ll attempt to steer clear of loaded words like “fundamental” and “hard-nosed” and “Hansbrough-like toughness” and all those other code words that really mean “unathletic and white.” As a center, Aldrich is a great two-way player who does all the little things well on offense and provides an imposing presence on defense. Although they are completely different players, Ben could probably teach him a few things on the defensive side of the floor. His ceiling isn’t the same as some of the other forwards due to his lack of explosiveness and the fact that he’s really not improved much in three years at Kansas, but with his skillset he should be a serviceable center for the next decade in Detroit.

8. Los Angeles Clippers: Xavier Henry, SG/SF, Kansas. Clearly, Los Angeles is in a bind here. The only players worth taking at this spot are power forwards, and word has it that they drafted some guy to play PF for them last year who’s pretty good. That leaves Henry, who the Clippers will have to reach three or four picks too early for and who plays the same position as their other young potential star, Eric Gordon. My guess is that they try to play Henry at the 3, which could potentially work; it’s just a winding road that will assuredly have its bumps along the way. As for Henry, he possesses a great body, great touch from outside, and good slashing skills. He’s a Paul Pierce prototype without the scorer’s mentality, which means he’ll never be a top threat but he’ll still scare defenses. Can play off the ball with the best of them.

9. Utah Jazz: Greg Monroe, PF, Georgetown. With Carlos Boozer likely skipping town, the Jazz will have to consider the draft to fill that need. Monroe is the kind of guy who can mix well with Deron Williams – a fundamentally sound post player who also has great passing skills. He’s not a high-flyer by any means – his athletic tools and ability are pretty pedestrian for a top-10 prospect – but he’ll provide an interior presence which can allow Okur to float outside, where he excels. They may also consider Davis or Motiejunas here, but Davis’s wrist may scare them and Motiejunas isn’t the inside force that Monroe is. This is a guy many see as a poor man’s Brook Lopez, as he’s got a soft touch and a beautifully sound back-to-the-basket game. He’ll have to work hard this summer – this past year he came in pretty out of shape for a top prospect, and a guy with his weaknesses (not very athletic, inconsistent shooter) can’t afford not to work his butt off.

10. Indiana: Ed Davis, PF, UNC. Frankly, I’m expecting deals all over the place in the next ten picks. I put Davis here because he’s the best available, but truthfully he’s not much of an upgrade for Indiana at the PF spot and where they really need help is the backcourt. They might also reach and take Whiteside here if they’re not sold on Hibbert (read: I’m not sold on Hibbert), but truthfully I don’t see Indiana standing pat come June 24th. As for Davis, he’s a big question mark. He’ll really need to shine in combine workouts to justify being taken in the lottery at all, since he’s still skinny as a rail, had a disappointing season while healthy, and is now returning from that wrist injury. Once he fills out though, he could potentially be a force.

11. New Orleans Hornets: Donatas Motiejunas, PF/C, Benetton Treviso. Frankly, I think this guy is the sixth-best player in this draft. While some have been scared away by European big men in the past, Motiejunas has some excellent basketball tools and has stood up well to scrutiny. European bigs generally have a higher rate of busting than other bigs, but Motiejunas is extremely skilled and has played against American prospects before with success. I wouldn’t be surprised to see someone take a chance on him early. He could turn out to be what Darko was supposed to be: An Andrea Bargnani-type player, not as good as someone like Dirk but I don’t see him busting like Milicic or Tskitishvili.

12. Memphis Grizzlies: Daniel Orton, C, Kentucky. Despite the fact that they’re the Grizzlies, Memphis actually had some of the best roster stability in the league. Four guys (Randolph, Mayo, Conley, & Gay) all started in at least 80 games, and Gasol started in 69 (the other 13 manned by Hasheem DeBacle). Compared to the Nets rotations, which changed from quarter to quarter, that’s pretty impressive. Like most of the teams before them, Memphis’s strength is in its frontcourt, but the best players here are all frontcourt players. I don’t think they take Whiteside after seeing Hasheem ThaBeaten (that’s right, two puns on his name in one paragraph. Tip your waiters.) fail so horridly last year, but they could use bench help pretty much everywhere. Orton has been rocketing up draft boards in the last few weeks (mostly since Jonathon Givony of DraftExpress started rightfully hyping him up). He looked extremely impressive in limited time behind Cousins and Patterson, and would potentially shine with more touches. He could be one of the best backup centers in the league next year, and should blossom into a starter (in or out of Memphis) with seasoning.

13. Toronto Raptors: Ekpe Udoh, PF/C, Baylor. With Chris Bosh’s imminent departure (sorry Raptors fans) in mind, Toronto will have to look to find a replacement for him at PF. Udoh isn’t flashy but gets the job done. While he’s a little old for a prospect – he’ll be 23 the first time he plays in an NBA game – he’s a great face-up PF and definitely has NBA talent. He could contribute to a bad team (like the Raptors), but there’s not too much upside.

14. Houston Rockets: Hassan Whiteside, PF/C, Marshall. Another team both a) involved in draft trades every year and b) rumored to be moving up, I almost feel silly making a pick for them when I doubt Daryl Morey will be here when the dust settles. That’s why I’ve slotted my best available here, regardless of position. Easily the single largest wild-card of this draft, Whiteside has scouts either drooling or vomiting. Some say he can be a Marcus Camby-type with a better jumper, and I can see it. He came out of nowhere – Whiteside was a backup in prep school, signed to relatively unknown Marshall, and started putting up triple-doubles with points, rebounds, and blocks. Hopefully this isn’t just an aberration from playing lower-level D1 schools. Very intriguing as a prospect.

Watch out for an updated mock draft next Wednesday!

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PG: Harris / XXX
SG: XXX / CLee / CDR
SF: XXX / TWill / CDR
PF: XXX / Yi / Hump
C: BLo / XXX

Needs: PF, SF, SG, PG, C

That's a lot of holes for a team stocked with 'pieces'.

Wall is done and gone everyone, just quit while you're ahead, there's no way he slides to #3 let alone #2.

If Turner drops, it's a no-brainer since he can play 2 of the open starter positions and could start at either one.

If the choice is Cousins or Favors than the real question is do you want a bigger and more dominant Zach Randolph (who's really more of a center) or a potential Dwight Howard type as a true-PF?

Zach had the best numbers of any big in the West this year. Nothing to laugh at, because Cousins will outplay him within 2 years. Now I love Cousins - way more than Favors. But if the comparison above ends up being accurate, which is very plausible, then you would be crazy to pass on Favors - especially if his style clashes with Brook.

LOL... your article is humourous

I'd take Wall and eat the loss on a DH trade. But that's partly because of intangibles, like the possibility of loading the roster with FA's. At least we might win a few games while the team is still in Jersey.

Favors gives us a three-man core with Twill still being of some use. With Wall, we'd have absolutely no use for him either, unless his 3pt shooting becomes more dependable, that is.

All I'm sayin is that Favors Is the better fit for this team and how it currently is constructed.

Amare>Zach Randolph

@YehYeh, So I guess you wouldn't draft Wall either, since we already have a PG (Harris). So if your not going to draft Wall, Turner or Cousins, who do you want?

@Toasters; Brook should try getting more rebounds on his own unless he expects to be spoon fed all the time. Cousins gets his own rebounds and converts. Watch the the tapes on Cousins for proof.

Hey folks, we're building a team around Brook (and for the moment, DH). We are not looking to dump him or to phase him out, are we?

So start there, and fill out the rest of the roster to maximize what we've got now.

Team means chemistry and matching parts: we need a pure PF with Kmart potential and some people who can drain a wide-open three and defend their man.

Cousins and Turner are not good matches for us. We don't need a second Brook and another slashing wing.

Mike-- It's a big problem for a big man when his guards don't get him the ball. This was the entire theme of Brook Lopez's (and the Nets') year. Turner didn't need to have the ball passed to him on the inside, and Cousins had two excellent passing guards.

"Cousins played with superstars"
"Favors played with scrubs"

What's next? "Favors was playing with a broken ankle"... "Cousins numbers were inflated by a computer glitch".

Turner didn't play on a all-star either. But Turner,like Cousins, is a better basketball player.

Favors might develop into a nice PF someday, but he has to learn how to play on the NBA level first.

Seriously... you can't pass on Favors here... the NBA is speeding up, plus Cousins and Lopez together would clog lanes like hell. Favors has better upside, better fit, better defender, much better athlete. Cousins played with superstars, Favors was maniacally efficient with scrubs who can't even throw an entry pass.

For what it' worth. I stole this from another Nets website.

It seems CDR is also a Cousins fan;

"Whether I’m a Net next year or not, The Nets should draft my young boy @boogiecousins w/that 3rd pick. Trust me. He’s going to be nicccce"!

I can't tell if you're kidding, but there is absolutely no chance that the Nets pass on Wall if he's at 3.
Favors is not just upside, he's upside and production. He's not like a Brandan Wright prototype. He's got an NBA-ready body at 18 and produced against upper-level competition.
So does Cousins, which is why I'm not against taking Cousins if Wall & Turner are off the board. Put it this way: Cousins is slightly the safer bet, but Favors has the slightly bigger star potential.

Maybe it will go...

1)Turner
2)Cousins
3)Favors (The Nets are so in love with Favors they forget Wall is still on the board)
4)Wall

No way do you pass on Cousins for a kid that you hope will develop a better game over the next few years.

Mike, I think the issue is that most people see it like this:
1) Wall
2) Turner
3) Favors/Cousins
And there's no consensus. I agree that Cousins right now is a better player than Favors and is a safer bet, but Favors obviously has the skyscraping upside that Cousins lacks. Despite the fact that the Favors train seems to be running full steam, I think Cousins would be an equally excellent pick, if not better.
Of course, I'm still holding out hope that the top 3 goes Turner-Cousins-Wall, so what do I know?

If Favors is better then Cousins then the Nets should draft Favors even if Turner is available. That will not happen of course. If Favors is better then Cousins why would Philly draft Cousins? If Cousins is available at #3 Nets will draft Cousins. You take BPA everytime, unless it's close, and Cousins is much better then Favors. He is a better basketball player, period. Are we putting a basketball team together or a boy scout troop?

"Randy Says:

May 19th, 2010 at 1:37 PM
Favors rebounds on both sides of the ball, and plays great defense. Brook needs a PF who is athletic, not chubby and slow like Cousins. Cousins also is a mental case, have we not learned from AREA 51, sheesh. Lastly if Favors gets good coaching, now available b/c of Proky he will be better than Cousins"
Please. Cousins is a BETTER rebounder than Favors, so stop bringing that up as a reason to draft Favors over DC. Also, I find it DISHONEST to mention Sean Williams and Cousins in the same sentence. Unlike Sean, Cousins doesn't have a criminal record nor has been involved in malicious activity off the court, so please stop this nonsense.

I have to laugh at people who want the Sixers taking Cousins #2, so that they can land Turner. They will argue we should take BPA but Philly shouldn't. LOL

P.S. I hear Chad Ford reports that Cousins is in phenomenal shape right now. Who knows, Cousins may go 1st after all.

Good points, Devin.
Johnson and Henry will go higher than they should because they bring a rare commodity to the NBA. They can put the ball in the hoop :D

It makes some sense for them to take Cousins. Cousins is more valuable in the long run, and they have a hole to fill in the middle.

@Shea-- thanks, it's good to have you on board. Now watch: Philly will go for Cousins, we'll get Turner, and we'll have to change the whole thing around :)

@Toasters I'm finally getting over the the mess that was the lottery and I've come round to your way of thinking. The nets sucked up front this year really badly sucked. I mean just plain, you get the point. I think since it is the biggest hole to fill if we draft a PF we should probably sign another PF in free agnecy to makes us strong up front. Preferably outside of Bosh David Lee as we know he can also play for Center for us which would be good with 3 very good big men. Dump Yi of course but yeah. We have talented wings in Devin, Lee and T will many of which only came along at the end of the season. So really if we majorly upgrade our front court we'll and improve our bench we'll be a pretty good team without wall or turner.

I like Rudy Gay, but I will say this: if he is on this team come October, there's a good chance our offseason has been a failure.

A big fat NO on Gay. Championships are not built on chuckers. Especially ones with big contracts.

@Stangz Agreed that Rudy Gay would be a nice piece to the puzzle, but LeBron is obviously the number one target and I think he's going to make people sweat... so while teams such as the Nets are waiting, maybe another steps up during the waiting period. The wait for LeBron will stink if it's long because many teams won't upgrade their team until they know what's up with LBJ.

Am I the only guy that would love the addition of Rudy Gay? Great player and can do almost everything.

Harris
Lee/T-Will
Gay/CDR
Favors
Lopez

I like that better than getting a free agent PF. Gay is young and fits our group better. If I could get anyone outside LeBron, Wade, and Bosh it would be Gay. We need a quality SF.

@Devin No worries, bro... Once she sees how "soft" you are, I'm sure she'll give me a call... And probably ask for Sebastian's number... HAHAHA!!!

Hey, if that scenario actually ends up happening, I'll tell her to give you a call. ;-)

@Devin Thanks for the C-Block on my dreams, buddy! Hahaha!

@CAT

This is now the first time I've smiled thinking about the Nets offseason since the lottery. Even if the chances of this are literally less than Dennis and Jessica Alba ever getting together, imagine convincing LeBron and Bosh (who can step out and hit the midrange and 3) to come to the Nets.
Then we run an absolutely GIANT lineup with Brook/Favors/Bosh/LeBron/Devin. Unstoppable. Absolutely freaking unstoppable.
Of course, that would look prettier with Wall and not Devin, but hey. My dreams are pretty much dead. Gotta find new ones.

numba1--
Yeah, I think we do get a FA PF. Brook would benefit from not having to play quite so many minutes. Injuries are always a possibility. Favors or Cousins would benefit from not having to face starter pressure, and either could back up Brook. If the FA is reasonably quick, we could occasionally run a big 3 front. So I think it's the smart play, and makes us very strong up front. With TWill, Devin, CLee, and CD-R, we'd only need a 3 (preferably one who can shoot) to be solid in the backcourt.

The more that I've come to accept that the Nets are picking third, the more I like Favors. Maybe I'll post about it... you commentors are like the wind beneath NAS' wings.

The only free agent forward I hope the Nets sign is obviously LeBron. However, barring that, if David Lee doesn't ask for the max, so the Nets can sign another significant free agent, I'd sign him first. Second would be Bosh, but he seems like an attention whore and a crybaby... will he mesh with Brook Lopez? If Amar'e didn't have a history of injury, particularly his knees, I'd be all over signing him to the max. Carlos Boozer to a max-year deal? Maybe, but if the Nets draft Favors or Cousins, it'll probably be another Paul Milsap situation. But, in the long run, probably worth it.

Derrick Favors is the best fit for the Nets at the top of this draft and I've known it all year long. Problem is he isn't the best player and because of that the Nets have entertained scenarios of adding yet another guard to the team and requiring the trade of ones we already have.

I've watched both Favors and Cousins A LOT this year. Favors has been easy to miss on the court, while Cousins has been so dominant that he's been impossible to miss. Based on this alone my eyeballs tell me that Cousins is by far the better selection. But that's the problem with Favors - you can't judge him by watching GTech games because it was just a bad matchup; guards who can't feed the post and a conflicting post player in Lawal. There were actually games that Lawal looked like the better talent.

But I urge you all to look through this veiled image of Favors to see what he really is. Coming out of high-school last year, Derrick looked like a bigger Josh Smith, but more athletic (is that possible?) I see him achieving at least Smith-status with similar style of play and most importantly; fitting in perfectly with Brook - much more so than Cousins.

REGARDLESS, MY QUESTION THIS:
If we take either one at #3 and fill our PF role... do they start? Do we spend money on FA-PF that will be replaced in 1-2? Being that this is a extremely Forward-heavy free-agency, it seems that the problem with drafting a PF is the conflict with FA-market. Does that mean only open slots would be SF and to a lesser extent SG?

I'm going to have a retrospective of third overall picks during the Lottery Era tomorrow morning... and Cousins reminds me of the very first third pick in the LE... Benoit Benjamin.

YIKES!

Another plus with drafting Cousins is that he can back up Brook at center. If case of injury to Brook we would have a capable backup.

I would still go after a stud PF in free agency and Cousins could get plenty of minutes filling in for Brook and whatever PF we acquired.

Remember, he is still very young, just like Favors and could develop slowly for us.

By the way, I believe Favors is a great pick if Cousins is not there for us. But most people would take Turner if Sixers took Cousins.

I feel bad for Nets fans who had their hopes and dreams smashed last night. But my #1 pick is still there.

let's just draft favors or cousins and also get a PF in free agency. i wanna see how terrence courtney and devin look next year playing another year together (with a real coach who might even teach defense) anyway

Well... I just hope you Nets fans out there are nice to Demarcus when he's announced as the Nets pick at #3. I know you will fall in love with him just like the fans down at UK did. He is talented and very funny, nice, young man. Sure he is immature but so are most young NBA players. The kid is only 19. As for his bad temper most great players have one. They just learn how to channel it better.

Don't be afraid. Lets get Cousins and swing for the fences. If we strike out at least we went down swinging. Playing it safe usually fails anyhow, plus it's boring as heck...

Pry talent tbh not really not unless there stupid

Well we could get the player we want for less money...

if we can trade for a proven player, that would probably be a better move, hopefully not a Antonio Mcdyess tpye, a la the Knicks, but someone who can play

Now let's get some pure shooters with later picks

Trading down is problematic: after the top 4 there's nobody nearly as attractive. Better we should trade up to #2-- Philly badly needs bigs. I still think they might draft a big anyway, so we'd be better off letting Stefanski mess it up on his own.

Favors rebounds on both sides of the ball, and plays great defense. Brook needs a PF who is athletic, not chubby and slow like Cousins. Cousins also is a mental case, have we not learned from AREA 51, sheesh. Lastly if Favors gets good coaching, now available b/c of Proky he will be better than Cousins

I disagree with Blazin. Picks 3-5 are nothing to scoff at. My preference is Favors, but I wouldn't mind Cousins, and I'd be perfectly happy with Wes Johnson. You can't thumb your nose at the draft just because these players aren't as sexy as a John Wall or Evan Turner. The Nets are overflowing with young guards, and have zero big men not named Brook. I knew before the draft that the Nets losing out on the top 2 picks might be a blessing in disguise. James Harden, O.J. Mayo, Al Horford, Deron Williams...all are recent 3rd overall picks that the Nets wouldn't mind having on their team, not to mention the other great players that fell to 4th or 5th.

Shea, what can we get from minnesota with exchanging the 4th pick?

Since Portland might be hounding for the 3rd and 4th picks, do you think we may be able to pry some good talent from them and trade down?

The Wolves are probably already going to trade down or up to get a swingman.

Hey if we could trade down (one spot) meh and still get Favors instead of cousines if that was what we wanted why not.

Mike-- "anybody can play defense if they work hard enough at it." Oh, so that's Dwight Howard's advantage: he was the guy who tried.

It's likely that Favors will be a far better pro than Cousins. Hell, over the last 10 games of the season he was a better college player.
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/player/gamelog?playe...
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/player/profile?playe...
But that's what you'd expect from the better athlete with more willingness to learn: he's gonna keep gaining.

Favors is a better athlete, a better defender, has a better attitude, fouls less, is in better condition, and is a year younger.
Cousins is bigger and has better post moves.

We need big, tough, rebounding men, the more the merrier. Plus Cousins can score. As for defense, anybody can play defense if they work hard enough at it.

Favors is a nice project and I like his assets but Cousins could be a monster in the NBA.

It's funny how people say draft the BPA unless they don't like the best BPA. Then they want to draft for fit.

I understand the concerns about Cousins but I would still jump in with both feet.

As far as I see it, Cousins can be an impact player and if he actually was better behaved and in better shape he easily would be considered the #1 pick this year.

That's where coaches and team management must step in and make sure the player develops proper work habits and behavior. Why spend millions of dollars on coaches for just X's and O's.

Draft Cousins and if it don't work out you can always blame me. LOL

all this talk about blessing in disguise is just ppl trying to help them sleep at night...

the fact is... we are just getting mediocrity... period.... i firmly believe the Nets should trade down if no big moves are coming

otherwise.... if Proky really wants to loo NY fans..then he has to make a splash with acquiring a superstar... no ifs and or buts..

Thorn and Proky must work their magic ... otherwise we will have an ordinary team winning 25-40 games...... New Yorkers will not take that serious at all....knicks get the benefit of the doubt because they are the knicks... sorry Net fans.. its the truth

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