Who wants the No.1 pick?
by rick olivares
By the time you read this, the
annual Philippine Basketball Association Rookie Draft is history (this column
is written on a Sunday morning because of deadlines). It gives newbies hope in
fulfilling their pro basketball dreams while it causes jitters among fringe
players who conference after conference look to land a roster spot.
Now in the 32- year history of
the PBA, the big man – power forward or center – has more oft than not, been the
top pick of the rookie draft. Twenty-three times to be exact.
Like its NBA counterpart,
practically almost all top picks play for the squad that drafted them. That
changed in 1998 when Shell drafted Danny Ildefonso then sent him to San Miguel
for Noy Castillo. Imagine what it would have been like had Danny paired with
Benjie Paras on that Shell team? As it happened, Shell faltered and eventually
left the league while Ildefonso led SMB to a bunch of titles and was named one
of the league’s greatest players of all time.
There next time controversy
reared its head was 11 years later when I broke the news that Japeth Aguilar
did not want to suit up for Burger King as he preferred to stay with the
national team! He did sign with Burger King, played one game was it? Then was
traded away to TNT then released to the national team.
In 2010, Air21 selected Nonoy
Baclao but traded him away after one conference! Yet after a season and half,
he was brought back by Air21!
Then in 2015 Rookie Draft,
BlackWater traded its spot to TNT which in turn selected Moala Tautuaa. In that
same draft, Mahindra (as KIA was known then) selected Troy Rosario but sent him
also to TNT.
In all these instances, I had to
wonder what is going on? Don’t these teams want to win? With KIA, that’s two
consecutive years they are trading away their top pick (not necessarily the
number one selection). I do not for one minute buy their reasoning -- assuming
that Christian Standhardinger is the top pick – that he does not fit their so-called
unconventional system. Then if you don’t want Standhardinger, then get Kiefer
Ravena. Or someone in the draft that fits what they want to do. As it is, they
are trading away the pick. It doesn’t make sense.
If you look at those draft picks
we pointed out, none of the players traded for the number one pick lasted with
their new teams. Castillo did well for Shell but became better when he moved to
Purefoods.
A cursory look at the NBA’s number
one overall picks, only three times in the 70-year history of the league, has
the consensus pick been traded. The first was in 1986 when the Philadelphia
76ers traded the number one overall pick (which turned out to be Brad
Daugherty) to Cleveland for veteran Roy Hinson, Jeff Ruland, Cliff Robinson,
and cash. It could have been acceptable however, the Sixers offloaded the
popular Moses Malone to Washington in the same season. Daugherty could have
learned playing behind Malone and alongside Charles Barkley. As it is, he
turned the Cavs into a power while Philly would not be the same until the 1993
when they acquired Rick Mahorn. Hinson, Ruland, and Robinson were serviceable
at best, but injuries eventually hurt them and they didn’t last in the City of
Brotherly Love for more than three years.
In 1993, the consensus number one
overall selection, Chris Webber, was sent by the Orlando Magic, to Golden State
for Anfernee Hardaway. It seemed to work for the Magic who had Shaquille O’Neal
at that time plus veteran power forward Horace Grant. Hardaway balanced the
line-up. It worked for three years before the Magic imploded. C-Webb left
Golden State after one year for Washington.
In 2014, the Cavaliers sent
Andrew Wiggins to Minnesota for power forward Kevin Love. We know how that
turned out to be.
I see nothing
wrong with trading draft picks, even top picks. However, you trade them to make your team better. It cannot be anything less than that or people will smell something rotten. When
making selections, you get parts to add to fill gaps or you simply get the best
player. That conundrum reared its head in the 1985 NBA Draft when the Portland
Trailblazers selected Sam Bowie and not Michael Jordan. What many people do not
know or maybe conveniently forget, Portland needed help upfront. Bowie fit the
bill. Jordan was an exciting high-flyer and had a suspect jumpshot. The
Trailblazers already selected their own high-flyer with a suspect jumper in
Clyde Drexler a year earlier. Of course, it can only be said in hindsight it
was a mistake. But was it? Portland with Drexler went to two NBA Finals. Jordan
of course, won six and is generally acclaimed at the Greatest of All Time. But
he went to the right team with the right situation. We aren’t sure he would
have been afforded that chance with Portland.
With that in mind, I am not sure
how Jay-R Reyes, Ronald Tubid, and Rashawn McCarthy make KIA better this year. I
think it wouldn’t have been as controversial if SMB added a regular rotation
player to the trade list.
In the PBA, you win by getting
the best players. If you look at Barangay’s recent championship, they
overwhelmed Meralco by their sheer size and talent – add their superb outside
shooting in Game Seven – with Greg Slaughter, Japeth Aguilar, Joe Devance, and
Justin Brownlee. The Bolts only had one stud inside and that was Allen Durham. Sure, there was Ranidel De Ocampo but he got injured.
Now should SMB select
Standhardinger, that gives them two frontcourt beasts. June Mar Fajardo will
see fewer double teams and get more rest. It will allow Marcio Lassiter and
gunner like Alex Cabagnot and Von Pessumal to flourish. But man... along with Arwind Santos... what a frontline!
But that’s all speculation at
this point. The true worth of this trade will be known by the end of next
season. In the meantime, the league has to bear all these controversies and
actuations. It’s all part of the deal.