Showing posts with label Andre Drummond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andre Drummond. Show all posts

Monday, March 11, 2013

NBA News 2013: Learning From The Kings' Thomas Robinson Mistake

DeMarcus Cousins at the Drew League/Goodman Le...
DeMarcus Cousins at the Drew League/Goodman League basketball game in August 2011 in Washington, DC. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Coming into this year’s draft, Thomas Robinson was considered one of the most “NBA ready” prospects available. An athletic 6’9 240 forward coming off an All-American season at Kansas, he had a defensive position (the 4) and a skill (rebounding) that would immediately translate to the next level. But while Robinson’s collegiate statistics were eye-popping, the holes in his game meant he would only be effective in a limited number of roles in the NBA, at least initially. The Sacramento Kings passed on several players with substantially higher upsides to make the “win now” selection in Robinson; eight months later, they dealt him to the Rockets for pennies on the dollar.

In a draft where Damian Lillard went No. 6 and Andre Drummond went No. 9, you would like to get a little more out of the No. 5 pick than Patrick Patterson, Toney Douglas and Cole Aldrich. Patterson has some value as an undersized stretch 4, but he’s a role player in his third season set to become much more expensive in the near future. With more talented players behind him in Houston, the Rockets would have been looking to give him away this summer. And while Robinson will be a more useful player in Kevin McHale’s uptempo system, he will probably never be a frontline starter. When the Kings selected him, they were thinking short when they should have been thinking long.

From an on-court perspective, Robinson didn’t make much sense for the Kings. DeMarcus Cousins is a low-post center who can’t protect the rim, so his ideal frontcourt partner is a shot-blocking power forward who can space the floor from the three-point line. It would be hard to find a worse fit than Robinson, an undersized big man without a consistent perimeter shot. Instead of making each other better, they made each other worse: they couldn’t co-exist defensively or get out of the other’s way on offense. As a result, with Cousins averaging 31 minutes a night, Robinson slowly slipped out of the rotation.

He will have a better chance to showcase his game with the Rockets. Rather than running an offense built around a post scorer, the Rockets spread the floor and attack with a barrage of pick-and-rolls. Robinson’s speed and finishing ability make him an excellent roll man and the four-out offense creates a lot of room for him to attack the basket. Not only is he now on the receiving end of James Harden’s passes, their breakneck pace (No. 1 in the NBA) gives him more chances in the open court. He’s more effective in transition, where he can use his speed and athleticism to his advantage, than in the halfcourt, where his lack of skill can be easily exploited.

All that said, Houston isn’t a perfect fit for him either. Since he can’t consistently knock down a perimeter jumper, it’s hard to play him and Omer Asik at the same time. The Rockets' offense is based around spacing the floor, and neither Robinson nor Asik can make a defense pay for leaving them open 15 feet from the rim. Asik is the only thing preventing their defense from collapsing in on itself like a neutron star, meaning Robinson will have to learn to shoot to play 30+ minutes a night with Houston. With the Kings, he had a 34% effective field goal percentage outside of 10 feet. Right now, he is best used as a small-ball 5, which means that if another team has a quality 6’10+ post scorer who can punish his lack of size down low, it’s going to be hard to find him minutes.

Developing an outside shot will be crucial for Robinson’s career. Since he’s unlikely to ever develop into an elite shot-creator, either with his back to the basket or off the bounce, a consistent jumper is the only way he can play as a power forward. When he plays as a 4, he can use his lateral quickness to defend in space on the perimeter; when he plays as a 5, he has to be an interior defensive presence and a rim protector. In college, he only averaged 0.87 blocks a game and outsourced defensive responsibility to Jeff Withey. That’s not going to work in the NBA, particularly when his skill-set demands a more offensive-minded big man next to him. He’ll have a long pro career regardless, but he’ll be a third big man if he doesn’t become more skilled offensively.

Robinson may have been more NBA ready than many of his peers, but that really isn’t saying all that much. For 99 percent of rookies, the first year in the league is mostly about survival. Not only have they just received a life-changing amount of money, but they have to become accustomed to the grind of an 82-game schedule. Players from BCS conferences might see an NBA-caliber player at their position once or twice a month; in the NBA, they match-up with multiple NBA-caliber players every single night. Their heads are spinning so fast that it seems unfair to even ask them to learn the complicated help-side defensive principles they never had to bother with in college.

If a team is depending on a rookie to be a foundation piece, they aren’t going to be very good. If they need a first-year player to be a complementary piece, he won’t be the one who pushes them over the top. There are situations where a rookie can fill a minor role on an elite team, like when the Heat drafted Norris Cole to match-up with smaller second-unit PG’s in 2011. Even if there was a higher-upside player on the board, Miami made the correct decision in taking a guy who gave them minutes in the NBA Finals as a rookie. However, for the most, there’s really no reason to draft a player based on what they are going to do in their first year.

When a player reaches the end of their rookie contract, what they’ll be able to do as they enter the prime of their careers is far more important than what they’ve done at the beginning. Coming out of UCLA in 2009, Darren Collison and Jrue Holiday both slipped in the draft. Holiday fell to No. 17 because he was many years away from his ceiling; Collison fell to No. 21 because there were questions about how high his ceiling was. Four years later, Holiday is an All-Star and Collison is falling out of favor with his third different team. Does it matter if Collison was a substantially better player in their rookie season?

Before this year’s draft, everyone acted like Andre Drummond was the biggest gamble on the board because of the lack of polish in his game. In reality, the real gamble was passing on a 6’11 270 monster with his type of freakish athleticism. If Sacramento had taken Drummond, he could have formed one of the biggest front-lines in the NBA and perhaps even made Cousins expendable down-the-road. Because the learning curve for rookies is so steep, drafting players is like shopping for a new car: they lose half their value once you take them off the lot. And if you go into the draft expecting that they will all need time to develop, you might as well take someone who can develop into something special when you get the chance.

http://basketball.realgm.com/article/226557/Learning-From-The-Kings-Thomas-Robinson-Mistake

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

NBA News 2013: Andre Drummond believes he ‘could be great’

Detroit Pistons logo 2001–2005. The return of ...
Detroit Pistons logo 2001–2005. The return of the traditional colors. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Detroit Pistons rookie center Andre Drummond wasn’t able to participate on Friday night in the BBVA Rising Stars Challenge with a back injury.  Selected by Shaquille O’Neal as part of Team Shaq, Drummond was on hand to talk about his rookie campaign.

“It’s great that the coaches really named me to be here and Shaq actually chose me as well with his third pick,” said Drummond, disappointed that he wasn’t able to play.  “It’s great being out here and great being noticed but I’m going to stick to being an assistant coach and stick alongside Shaq.”

Drummond is sidelined another three to five weeks with a stress fracture of the left lumbar vertebra.

Through 50 games, Drummond averaged 7.3 points, 7.5 rebounds and 1.7 blocks a game.  The Pistons may have a special combination with forward/center Greg Monroe and Drummond, once the two fully develop.

Right now Drummond is just trying to heal and learn how he can impact the NBA game.

“I think from the first game, I think [Coach Lawrence Frank] can vouch for me too, I think from my first game up until now I’ve gotten better on a daily basis,” he said.  “I just work hard, that’s really what it comes down to – giving 100 percent every single day.”

Drummond was improving dramatically, prior to his injury.  In a recent one-point loss to the Los Angeles Lakers, he pulled down 11 boards and blocked four shot, while scoring nine points.  Drummond he’s just scratching the surface.

“I’m getting a glimpse of what I could be,” Drummond said.  “I’m not really going to get big-headed at all.  I just know that it’s all effort and energy and hard work that it’s going to take for me to be good.”

Drummond doesn’t want to settle on being just “good.”

“I think I could be great one day,” he said.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/andre-drummond-believes-he-could-be-great/

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

NBA 2013: Magic's Nicholson added to Rising Stars game

NBA All-Star Game 2010
NBA All-Star Game 2010 (Photo credit: rondostar)

Magic rookie forward Andrew Nicholson has been chosen as a replacement for the BBVA Rising Stars Challenge game at the All-Star weekend in Houston.

Nicholson replaces Detroit Pistons center Andre Drummond, who can't play because of a back injury.

Nicholson has appeared in 48 games this season for Orlando and made his 14th start against Portland on Sunday night. The 19th overall pick in last year's draft entered the game averaging 7.6 points and 3.5 rebounds.

His scoring average is 10th among rookies this season.

Nicholson, who will play for Shaquille O'Neal's "Team Shaq", joins Orlando teammate and second-year center Nikola Vucevic, who was previously selected for the game. Vucevic will be playing on Charles Barkley's "Team Chuck".

http://www.nba.com/2013/news/02/10/magics-nicholson-added-to-rising-stars-game.ap/index.html?ls=iref:nbahpts

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Monday, February 11, 2013

NBA News 2013: Pistons push Drummond to get healthy

Detroit Pistons famous "Bad Boys era"...
Detroit Pistons famous "Bad Boys era" logo 1979–1996. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Long term, there is nothing wrong with Andre Drummond’s back that a little rest and some of his mother’sJamaican cooking can’t fix.

But in the short term, the news that Drummond will be out for four to six weeks is a small blow to the Detroit Pistons because the rookie from Connecticut has created a buzz among fans.

The last 2 1/2 months of the season was going to feature Drummond paired with teammate Greg Monroe, allowing the frontcourt of the future to grow accustomed to playing together. It’s a pairing coach Lawrence Frank has used more as the season has progressed, so the injury is a setback for those plans.

Still, Frank said before the Pistons beat the Milwaukee Bucks, 105-100, on Saturday that Drummond has to get to work.

“Right now his job is to get healthy,” Frank said before the game. “That’s his job.

“He has to do everything he can to rehab and listen, follow the directions of our training staff and doctors to get himself right.”

Frank said the coaching staff will make a point to keep Drummond involved, showing him game film and letting him learn by watching.

“He gets a chance to look at the game in a different way, and I think he’s already noticed some things,” Frank said. “You turn every negative into a positive, and you get better intellectually and physically when you’re injured.”

Drummond, 19, has been placed in a special custom brace. He will be evaluated on a regular basis, said team doctor Ben Paolucci.

http://www.hoopsworld.com/pistons-push-drummond-to-get-healthy/

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Monday, June 25, 2012

NBA News 2012: Robinson, Drummond work out for Bobcats

Primary logo (2004–present)Primary logo (2004–present) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Thomas Robinson made a quantum leap during his junior year at Kansas.

He spent Friday morning trying to convince the Charlotte Bobcats that he has even more upside.

Robinson and Connecticut's Andre Drummond worked out for the Bobcats as part of Charlotte's evaluations for the June 28 NBA draft.

The Bobcats own the second pick and are considering several options on the assumption that New Orleans will select Kentucky's Anthony Davis at No. 1.

''I feel I have potential to develop even more as a player,'' Robinson said. ''I still have a high ceiling. I feel I'm nowhere near complete as a player, so I think I have more upside than people think.''

Robinson, at 6-9, and the 6-10 Drummond represent intriguing options should the Bobcats decide to take a big man with the No. 2 pick. Earlier this week the team worked out guard Bradley Beal of Florida and small forwards Michael Kidd-Gilchrist of Kentucky and Harrison Barnes of North Carolina.

Robinson, who played in the shadows of Cole Aldrich and Marcus and Markieff Morris during his first two years at Kansas, blossomed as a junior this past season, averaging 17.7 points and 11.9 rebounds. He led the nation with 27 double-doubles and was a first-team AP All-American.

Bobcats officials, including owner Michael Jordan and new coach Mike Dunlap, declined to comment after the workout. But NBA scouts in general like Robinson's explosiveness, his motor, and his rebounding ability.

''I'm a little better off the dribble than people think,'' Robinson said. ''My shot has gotten a lot better since the season was over. I'm learning how to read the defense better than I ever did before, so I'm just learning a different pace of the game and it's helping me.''

The Bobcats have four power forwards on the roster: Tyrus Thomas, Eduardo Najera, D.J. White and Derrick Brown.

''I like (the Bobcats') potential,'' said Robinson, who has also worked out for Cleveland and Washington. ''They've got a young point guard in Kemba (Walker) and also a bunch of young players surrounding him. I think they just need a couple more players to get over the hump and I would like to be one of those players. I think I would fit in perfect because the up-tempo game fits me perfect and I can also play in the halfcourt.''

Drummond averaged 10 points, 7.6 rebounds and 2.7 blocked shots as a freshman for the Huskies.

NBA scouts love his size, strength, length, agility and ability to run the floor, but have concerns about his offensive skills.

He would clearly fill a position of need for the Bobcats, who have only two centers under contract in Byron Mullens and DeSagana Diop.

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/drummond-robinson-bobcats-161311128--nba.html;_ylt=ApFLznoKbRzTpUaEzrkkdvq8vLYF

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