Prospect Profile

Prospect Profile Series

As the summer approaches, Hoops Rumors will preview the 2013 NBA draft by taking a closer look at many of the prospects expected to be selected on June 27th. Our list of Prospect Profiles will continue to be updated in the coming weeks, becoming more comprehensive leading up to the draft, and can be found anytime under "Hoops Rumors Features" on the right sidebar.

The players we've profiled so far can be found below, sorted by their ranking on DraftExpress.com's list of top 100 prospects for 2013.

Prospect Profile: Victor Oladipo

If his track record of yearly improvement is any indication, Victor Oladipo could turn out to be the best player in the 2013 draft class. The rise of Indiana's athletically gifted swingman may not be fast enough to make him the No. 1 overall selection this June, but suffice it to say that TNT's Kenny Smith will get enough practice saying his name that he won't mispronounce it as he did on air last weekend.

Oladipo was a starter for just one season in high school at powerhouse DeMatha in Maryland, and was a middling prospect as he made his way to Indiana. Last season was his first as a full-time starter for the Hoosiers, and he made his mark as an energetic defender, delivering 1.4 steals per game in 26.7 minutes of action. Offensively, he was raw, at best. He notched just 10.8 points per game and shot a woeful 20.8% from three-point range. Thanks in large measure to a dramatic rise in his outside shooting ability, Oladipo has ascended into the elite this year. He's a 43.3% three-point shooter as a junior this season, and his overall field goal percentage has risen to 59.4%, remarkably high for a perimeter player. Together, that gives him an effective field goal percentage of 64%, and no lottery prospect has done better, as DraftExpress points out.

Oladipo is sixth on both the DraftExpress and ESPN rankings of draft hopefuls, though there's dispute over whether he's the best prospect on his own team. Cody Zeller was supposed to be the focal point for Indiana entering the season, but his relatively disappointing play coupled with Oladipo's emergence has forced the center to share the spotlight, if not cede it completely. The stacked Hoosiers roster helps explain why scouts are so high on Oladipo even though he averages just 13.6 PPG. He takes just 8.5 shot attempts a game, a number that figures to be higher next season in the NBA. In a way, it's reminiscent of Dion Waiters' role with Syracuse last season. Though Waivers was a sixth man and Oladipo starts, Waiters averaged about one more shot attempt per game than Oladipo does this year. The Cavs drafted Waiters No. 4 overall, and now he's putting up 14.7 PPG on 13.4 field goal attempts per game as the starting two guard for Cleveland.

The glaring difference between Oladipo and Waiters is on defense, where Oladipo's athleticism and motor have allowed him to dominate. Much could come down to Oladipo's pre-draft measurements. He's listed at 6'5", but if the tape shows he's any shorter, teams might downgrade him based on the concern that he couldn't guard small forwards. His effort and skill have never been in question, and that could help him overcome a size disadvantage, but such hairs are often split when deciding between the top 10 most heralded players in the world. In any case, he should be able to defend both guard positions, at least, and his enticing combination of athleticism and rebounding ability might be enough to sway any skeptics. His 6.4 rebounds per game average is second only to Zeller's on the team.

Often, fast risers up the draft board are international players about whom relatively little is known. This time, it's a homegrown product turning heads, and NBA executives will no doubt pay keen attention to his performance in the final rounds of the NCAA tournament. A poor shooting night may put a dent in his stock, particularly among teams that question whether this season's numbers are unsustainably high, but Oladipo doesn't seem conditioned to end with a whimper. There's a long way to go between March and the June 27th draft, and as some execs get their first in-person glimpses at him during pre-draft workouts, I wouldn't be surprised to see Oladipo's rise continue.

Prospect Profile: Nerlens Noel

A few months ago, there was little question that Kentucky big man Nerlens Noel would be the No. 1 overall pick in the 2013 draft.  However, a gruesome knee injury suffered against Florida in February changed all of that.  After chasing down Mike Rosario on a fast break layup and swatting his shot with authority, Noel slammed his left knee against the base of the hoop, resulting in a season-ending ACL tear.  

The 18-year-old was close to a mortal lock to go first overall in the draft, but now no one is sure exactly where he'll go in the draft, or if he'll even enter.  Kentucky's other standout freshmen, Alex Poythress, Willie Cauley-Stein, and Archie Goodwin, could all return to campus next season, despite being projected first round picks.  Noel seems less likely to come back for his sophomore year on the surface, but he may be tempted to stay in school by the prospect of playing with the nation's most talented college team next season.  Heck, if things really go John Calipari's way, next year's UK team could also feature top high schoolers Andrew Wiggins and Aaron Gordon.

Odds are, however, that Noel will play it safe and enter this year's draft.  After all, it doesn't make a great deal of business sense for Noel to return to Lexington, risk aggravating his injury, and jump in with the hyper-talented 2014 group when he can instead go top five in a historically weak class on one leg.  If Noel can show that his knee is back to 100%, he could easily reclaim his spot as the consensus No. 1 overall pick ahead of Kansas' Ben McLemore.

In the 24 games that he did play for the Wildcats, the 6'10" forward showed that he has very rare athleticism for a player of his size.  With tremendous footspeed and a wingspan that is reportedly six inches larger than his height, he has a highlight reel that most NBA big man can't accumulate in an 82 game season.  Defensively, he is a game changer with a mindset similar to that of a young Kenyon Martin.  He won't just lock on to his assignment, he'll go wherever he is needed on the hardwood to pressure both big men and guards.  

Offensively, well, it's a different story.  His size should lend itself to a strong back-to-the-basket game that attracts multiple defenders, but he isn't much of a scorer.  This year's Kentucky team was fairly thin on offense and they did not call on Noel for points on a regular basis.  He doesn't have a mid-range game either, but he'll have to come up with something at the next level to be effective in a halfcourt set.  Of course, at the age of 18, there's no reason to think that he can't develop his offensive tools over time.  Noel probably doesn't have as high of a ceiling as Kentucky alum Anthony Davis, but he can eventually become an impact player in his own right.

Prospect Profile: Kevin Jones

You won't find Kevin Jones' name in the first round of Alex Lee's Hoops Rumors mock draft, or anyone else's mock draft for that matter.  However, if agent Bill Neff is to be believed, the power forward out of West Virginia will be off the board before pick No. 31 rolls around.

A team in the first round has committed to him,” Neff told Adam Zagoria of ZagsBlog. “The question is, what does that mean? I never trust anything other than what happens on draft night…He’ll get drafted,” Neff added. “It’s either them in the first or early second.

Read more

Prospect Profile: John Jenkins

Vanderbilt's John Jenkins is a hot name with teams picking in the latter part of the first round and with good reason.  He can really shoot.  Jenkins played three years at Vanderbilt and shot over 40 percent from three in every one of them.  His jumper is by far his best feature as a player, so expect playoff teams that could use a sniper off the bench to have interest.

Equally important at the next level will be Jenkins ability to utilize his lethal range in a variety of fashions.  He has an extremely quick release and showed he could shoot off screens and off the dribble in college.  Jenkins' form is picturesque and he has mastered squaring up on his release, making his jumper effective in most in-game situations. 

Read more

Prospect Profile: Andrew Nicholson

The draft is just over two weeks away and this is the time of year when mock drafts seem to shift wildly from day-to-day.  It only makes sense as some players come out firing in workouts, others shrink when bullied by less-heralded competition, and a few simply refuse to participate in the tougher auditions.  Count Andrew Nicholson of St. Bonaventure as a member of the first camp.   Most mock drafts have the forward pegged in the early-to-mid 20s, but his latest showing could propel him even higher.

Read more

Prospect Profile: Evan Fournier

When it comes to draft night, the mysterious aura that international prospects carry from their home country to the NBA represents a different type of hope when compared to your typically familiar collegiate athlete. Depending on how you look at them, either the risk outweighs the reward, or the reward outweighs the risk. For every Pau Gasol, Dirk Nowitzki, or Ricky Rubio, a dozen Nikoloz Tskitishvili's crop up throughout the first round. But the simple existence of Gasol and Nowitzki plants an ever-optimistic thought in the minds of fans everywhere: despite foreign players bringing a heightened sense of unpredictability regarding their future alongside their name, gold can be struck.

Read more

Prospect Profile: Will Barton

Will Barton does not lack confidence. The University of Memphis swingman currently sits 38th on the DraftExpress.com prospect listing, but he recently told Lang Greene of HoopsWorld he believes he's the best wing player in the draft.

Read more

Prospect Profile: Quincy Miller

For no NBA Draft prospect are the pre-draft workouts more important than for Baylor's Quincy Miller.  If you haven't heard of Miller or don't know much about him, maybe it is because you  saw him but just assumed he was Perry Jones III.  There is no way one college team, much less the Baylor Bears, could have two 6-foot-10 super athletic wings who can shoot, right? 

Read more

Prospect Profile: Jeff Taylor

Confidence is everything in life, and that includes basketball.  Despite being blessed with a whole lot of natural talent, Vanderbilt forward Jeff Taylor could never seem to produce consistently.  This season, head coach Kevin Stallings sat down with the 6-foot-7, 225-pound senior and explained to him that he wasn't expected to be perfect each and every night.

"I just told Jeff that he couldn't allow great to be the enemy of good," Stallings told Chris Dortch for NBA.com. "And that good was more than acceptable a lot of the time. We would take great when we could get it, but we didn't want to feel bad about good."

Read more