by Metsis on Mon Apr 16, 2007 8:28 pm
Well guys like Murray and Kinsey and all those guys who are not picked with the top 10 picks and especially those picked in the second round or undrafted doesn't mean that they are not good players. Sure scouting and all that can weed out the really good players from the average players easily, but after the top crop each year, drafting becomes more of a guessing game. You never know what you are going to get with second round picks and signing undrafted guys... Basically the second round picks can be called the lucky ones... These lucky ones did enough to spark some intrest in some managers, just enough to remember their names, it doesn't mean that they are better than the undrafted guys. Maybe you didn't work out for the team that could have really used your skills...
But there are numerous examples of late 2nd round picks becoming real steals and undrafted players wading into the league even though they didn't get "lucky" on draft day. Ben Wallace is a huuuge example of this. The guy goes undrafted and first NBA coaches say that "you ain't gonna make it in this league"... And, bam, you get yourself a world class defensive specialist at the end of the day.
This is all about people... And people handle different things differently... Some people get discouraged when they are not drafted and wonder off to do something else with their lives or go play in Europe etc. So people like Arenas and Wallace and Redd took personal insult to these "draft" choices and coach comments and decided to prove them all wrong. It doesn't always work that way, but sometimes it does, and it's always sweet as sugar when it does. Everyone loves rooting for the underdog... I certainly do.
And the system does make a difference too. Some systems just fit better to some players and don't fit at all for other players... It is why a change of team can seemingly turn an average player into a star over night when a trade is finished or when a guy signs with a different team.
After every draft, there are guys that are left on the outside looking in, that eventually end up being great ball players. Or the 13th guy on the roster really has to hope for a run of injuries etc. to really show your game on the big stage... It just is a fact and a primal nature of the beast. In order for a guy to go from obscrutiny to center stage, usually something has to terribly wrong for someone else. Pau Gasol's rookie season is a prime example of this. I remember in the preseason games, he was lighting it up with 20 pts, some boards and a pair of blocks almost on average. But when season began, Stro Swift was still starting and Pau hardly got any playing time to really assert himself on the court. I had Pau on my fantasy team and I was cursing my ill fate at the time. Then after like 10 games into the season Stro gets hurt and Pau is all of a sudden in the starting lineup... Putting up 25 pts, 7 boards and 2 blocks. But had Stro not been hurt, he probably wouldn't be the player he is today...
As a rookie, you need to get your shot... And use it when it comes. Like in any other sport, you have to assert your self, if you are going to make it and that time and chance is usually from someone elses pocket. Its not like they make the games longer every year to accomodate the new rookies. And its not like everyone gets handed a sports franchise to save... Darko is a good example, but I won't get into that...