Lavar Ball strikes again

#76
#76
That helps make my point. NBA evaluations are easier hence the lack of gems late in the draft while those are common in the NFL. That doesn't mean NFL evaluators are better. Its means they're worse since they allowed great talents to slide in the draft.

So the fact that the NBA has harder time finding gems makes it easier than the NFL? Interesting logic.

The NBA has a lot less information to work with than the NFL. The 3 year rule in the NFL allows them to get a good sample size.
 
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#77
#77
The NBA has few can't miss players. The odd part is you never know when they are going to come. In some cases they get grouped together. For instance the famous draft with Jordan. The LeBron draft is the same. The biggest problems is NBA executives over analyzing thinks. Going on potential of likes of Darko Milic when known commodities are available. I feel in the NFL. While the potential versus known commodities still cost teams in draft. A bigger issue is converting players hiding deficiencies from college schemes or easier to star as QB when loaded with talent like Reggie Bush and Matt Leinert. Or Alabama's defenses are great as sum of 11 but you rarely get can tell how they will be when they get exclusive attention as individuals. Double teams etc... In the NBA most of the game is free flowing which isn't that far from college except all the zone defenses they will never see in the NBA. So basically you know what you are getting in the NBA. the problem is so few game changers available.

Zones are legal in the NBA.
 
#78
#78
So the fact that the NBA has harder time finding gems makes it easier than the NFL? Interesting logic.

The NBA has a lot less information to work with than the NFL. The 3 year rule in the NFL allows them to get a good sample size.

He's still bitter about Kelvin Taylor. "Slid in the draft" and right off of team rosters. Made him look foolish...again. :)
 

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