Kel’el Ware gained a reputation of having a low motor during his one season at Oregon. He played with much more effort during his one season with Indiana and that’s why the Heat had no qualms about selecting him with the No. 15 pick, Ira Winderman of the South Florida Sun Sentinel writes.
“I think that’s a low-hanging-fruit description of him,” Adam Simon, the Heat’s VP of basketball operations, said. “Kel’el is not that. I think he went to Oregon, was playing behind an established player, an older player. He played in every game out there, saw a better situation for himself to go to Indiana. For him, he showed what he can do. He played with a motor. He played with intensity. And I think we’re talking about a young player that has an edge to him.”
Simon has another description of Ware in terms of what he brings to the table, according to Anthony Chiang of the Miami Herald.
“Kel’el is a three-and-D center,” he said. “It is not easy to find 7-footers who can play out on the perimeter offensively and also be able to defend with his ability to shot block and defend the post. For us, that was very appealing.”
We have more from the Southeast Division:
- Don’t expect the Heat to re-sign both Haywood Highsmith and Caleb Martin in free agency, Chiang reports in a separate story. Highsmith is set to become an unrestricted free agent and Martin holds a $7.1MM option on his contract, which he will likely decline. With the Heat’s payroll already near the second apron, the best Miami can realistically hope for is to re-sign one or the other, Chiang writes.
- The Wizards’ moves in recent days signal that they’re attempting to build for four or five years down the road, while focusing on the crucial 2025 and 2026 draft lotteries, Josh Robbins of The Athletic opines. They made three selections in Wednesday’s first round. If that trio plays significant minutes as rookies, it’s almost a given the Wizards will be on the fast track to the bottom of the standings the next two seasons as they develop.
- Charles Lee, the new Hornets coach, said that LaMelo Ball is focused on being durable next season after a couple of injury-riddle campaigns. “I think that he’s just doing all that he can possibly do to make sure that he’s more available this year, a little bit healthier,” Lee told Roderick Boone of the Charlotte Obersver. “Injuries are going to happen, but if you can do a lot of the work on the front end, hopefully you can create some luck where you avoid one or two of these little minor, nagging injuries. And then outside of that, I just think that offensively, he’s going to be a big component or a big part of us being able to play fast.”
- The Hornets are coming off a 21-win season but Lee is impressed with the talent level within the roster, according to the Associated Press. “We have a very, very good team here,” Lee said. “We’ve been snakebit with some injuries. … But this group is focused on the right things. The expectations are that we are going to compete every night, whether it’s a home game, road game or whoever is playing. This is going to be a group that is together offensively and defensively, no matter who is on the floor.”
As I’ve said, I’m behind on my nba/draft stuff, and haven’t had much opportunity to do much scouting/video watching, but from first watches on Kel’el Ware, I am very concerned, and outright annoyed, especially with what was on the board for the Heat at that time. Theoretically, I understand what he brings, (non Bam minutes were rough for the Heat last year) but people comparing him to Myles Tyrner, Chet Holmgren, etc have no idea what they’re talking about. His scouting report doesn’t suggest those things at all, especially if you know Myles Turner
Instead…this dude is basically a raw Hassan Whiteside/Mitchell Robinson type. He has a ton to improve on, including mentally. Has to learn how to give consistent effort, has to get stronger b/c right now, he’s soft…he isn’t great defending the perimeter/defending pick and roll either, and he seems block happy, and foul prone. Offensively, he doesn’t set acreens…he looks like he can shoot more than he actually can, he is a turnover machine, and he brings the ball down when he catches it before going back up…This is literally Hassan Whiteside
Orlando Robinson losing his spot to him sucks. Ware has more upside defensively, but Orlando is way better offensively, and has shown improvement in areas, and is an actual hard worker that earned more opportunities, and is already here. I don’t like this pick with so many options on the board
1 thing I think this pick means is either adding another pick, or at 43, they expect to get a good option there, or they have a couple of guys they like in summer league
But it also might mean options to trade Herro/Rozie+Jovic or Duncan aren’t really there
Go Wizards. Rebuild in full-time. Will take a couple of years