Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

The Draft Thread/Center,Center,Center


rippadonn
 Share

Recommended Posts

Kofi Cockburn's game and size 7'0 285lbs makes him a day one starter over ALL our rookies and vets, to me.

A total freak of nature in the mold of Shaq. Nobody is touching him in the paint, if they do they will be moved. He's scoring, dunking, dominant post presence.

Edited by rippadonn
  • Pie 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Kofi looks like a football player playing basketball... He has to lose weight and work on his conditioning.. He's like Shaq without the nimble feet and years of basketball skills.. He looks like he just started playing basketball and is succeeding on natural ability (being bigger and stronger then everybody he faces) .  I didn't see alot of defensive highlights or shooting range outside of 4 to 5 feet from the rim... He needs alot of work but the ball clay to work with is intriguing...

Bassey seem like he further along in his basketball skills plays great defense has a jump shot and fits more with the modern nba centers game then Kofi... Kofi has a bigger upset but a way lower floor...

Does a player like Shaq work in today's nba anymore??

Edited by WOW!!
  • Beer 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, WOW!! said:

Kofi looks like a football player playing basketball... He has to lose weight and work on his conditioning.. He's like Shaq without the nimble feet and years of basketball skills.. He looks like he just started playing basketball and is succeeding on natural ability (being bigger and stronger then everybody he faces) .  I didn't see alot of defensive highlights or shooting range outside of 4 to 5 feet from the rim... He needs alot of work but the ball clay to work with is intriguing...

Bassey seem like he further along in his basketball skills plays great defense has a jump shot and fits more with the modern nba centers game then Kofi... Kofi has a bigger upset but a way lower floor...

Does a player like Shaq work in today's nba anymore??

You're over the target. Does he fit in today's NBA? He's an old school lob it up, rebound stick back, Shaq 2.0.

His game is in the paint and only in the paint, but he is dominant there in the paint nobody can guard that stick back. Nobody is going to push him out even as a rookie.

I don't know if Shaq fits in today's NBA but I'd sure like to be the team that has Shaq.

 

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, rippadonn said:

You're over the target. Does he fit in today's NBA? He's an old school lob it up, rebound stick back, Shaq 2.0.

His game is in the paint and only in the paint, but he is dominant there in the paint nobody can guard that stick back. Nobody is going to push him out even as a rookie.

I don't know if Shaq fits in today's NBA but I'd sure like to be the team that has Shaq.

 

Kofi needs to stay another year a develop his game..  

Him not getting pushed around is based on him facing talent not big as him.. In the NBA he will see guys on most nights just as big and strong as him... So I don't know if that is true..

His Defense will be a albatross on a team until he can show he can move around the perimeter... With bigs who can shoot and face up he will put us at a disadvantage in the defensive end.. 

I also didn't see any passing ability which if he's gone to just be a post player he better Atleast be able to pass out of double teams...

Jmo I don't think he's ready for the nba..

Edited by WOW!!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, WOW!! said:

Kofi needs to stay another year a develop his game..  

Him not getting pushed around is based on him facing talent not big as him.. In the NBA he will see guys on most nights just as big and strong as him... So I don't know if that is true..

His Defense will be a albatross on a team until he can show he can move around the perimeter... With bigs who can shoot and face up he will put us at a disadvantage in the defensive end.. 

I also didn't see any passing ability which if he's gone to just be a post player he better Atleast be able to pass out of double teams...

Jmo I don't think he's ready for the nba..

All true, but he IS a scoring big. He IS Shaq. I remember the same things being said about Shaq. Kofi has rare athleticism for that size. He's got a great feel around the rim. His outside game isn't strong (Shaq) but that inside game at 7'0 285lbs is NBA ready. The game wanted guys like Kofi but they became few and far between so theses 7'0 220lb guys started to get the run. Kofi (if you already got your 1-4 is exactly what you need at C, a huge immovable defender, a post scoring savant, if you get him the ball in the paint EVEN in the NBA it's over. He is physically a man among boys, just like Zion, big and heavy is big and heavy that won't change. He doesn't play like a man of almost 300lbs. He's running the floor with everyone else, he's defending. He is the old school center prototype. 

He IS soooooo much like Shaq to me, even FT %. People said the same things about Shaq, but who would be able to guide Kofi (Shaq) and Lamelo(Kobe) better than Mitch?

Edited by rippadonn
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I’m not necessarily advocating sticking with Bryce. His highs show the ability is there, but there’s enough bad film out there to doubt that he can consistently enough play at a high enough level. But this video from Brett Kollman is a pretty good argument to give it a bit more time, whether that be rolling with Bryce just next year or picking up his 5th year option (not extending him).      The gist is that the structural (wider hashes) and rule (3 yd vs 1 yd thresholds for intelligible offensive lineman downfield penalties) differences in the college and NFL have led to wildly different play calling and scheme diets in college. There is much more shotgun and RPO calls in college and screen/quick throws. This simply doesn’t set up young QBs to be able to play under center, which is more preferred in the NFL due to RBs being able to more effectively run out of that formation.  They don’t know how to do it and have to learn. Yes, the NFL has trended more toward college style offense in the last decade or so, but it isn’t that pronounced and is more out of necessity than desire. And on top of all that, they ask the young QBs to do all this learning with coaching and other personnel churn going on around them.  Bad results lead to coaches getting fired and new ones with different ideas on scheme and footwork and different terminology and playbooks coming in. It makes it harder on those young QBs to learn.     So we may drop Bryce for a young QB starter in the draft and be in a similar situation. With a QB who is going to take years to learn how to operate in an NFL style offense and will struggle along the way.  So you have to weigh whether the struggles we see from Bryce are more due to this learning process vs solely physical limitations on his part. It’s almost undoubtedly a bit of both, but the answer to that question I think dictates your strategy at QB over the next few years. And of course, you have to consider what the alternatives available are.    I’m neither a Bryce hater or a Bryce Stan and I don’t have an answer to that question. But I do fear that if we move on from him, unless it’s for an established player, we’re just in for continued frustration on the QB front because it’s going to take a few years for a college QB to develop (Drake Maye’s don’t grow on trees). 
    • The defense has pulled that feat off this season though.  Multiple times. offense has not had a single good first half all season.  Only and good opening scripted drive paired with disappointing play.  defense has been the actual unit you can measure real and consistent improvement IMO.  Still holes and flaws to it that aren’t going away until new bodies get here but they really are the story of the season IMO
    • One thing about RB's and LB's is they are going to get hurt. It's inevitable. Having a fresh Chuba is not a bad thing.  My only criticism of this entire situation is that I wish our staff would adjust personnel to matchup a little better. I think Chuba is a lot better than Rico against the stacked boxes we've seen the last two weeks. They are very different backs with very different strengths, and I love them both. Rico is so good at identifying the hole early, and hitting it full speed early. He's much better at breaking the big run. Chuba is a much more patient back, and finds 3 yards when there's nothing there better than Rico.  It's in no way a criticism of either, but I think Chuba would have had more success than Rico the way the Saints and Falcons attacked us from a Defensive standpoint.  When you put 9 in the box, often times there is no hole to attack. 
×
×
  • Create New...