Tag Archives: Jalen Johnson

Who’s The One 2021: Cade’s Turn

At first blush Cade Cunningham looked to me like the American version of Luka Doncic and the clear favorite to be the first pick in the 2021 draft. Now that he is 16 games into his freshman season with Oklahoma State, the results are in and Cade is no Luka Doncic. During the broadcast of his most recent game (a loss to Kansas in which he recorded one assist and seven turnovers), Fran Fraschilla remarked that he is not ready to anoint Cade as the top pick and general managers he had spoken to expressed the same sentiment. While Frischilla is often a bad take machine, I agree with him on this. Cade Cunningham may well be the best prospect in the 2021 draft, but is it time to at least consider the possibility that he is not.

The case for Cade going #1 is fairly straightforward. He is a young, 6’8″ point forward with top recruit pedigree who currently leads the Big 12 in scoring and boasts strong shooting splits from three point range and the foul line. The Luka comp is off the table, but Cunningham could be the next Jayson Tatum or Paul George, both of whom ranked 7th in my draft model retrodictions and would probably go 1st overall in a re-draft scenario.

YEARRKPLAYERPOSDMXHTAGEPTSREBASTSTLBLKTOV
20218Cade CunninghamSF3.46’8″19.821.47.13.81.61.14.5
20177Jayson TatumSF4.76’8″19.320.58.92.61.61.43.2
20107Paul GeorgeSF3.86’9″20.218.68.02.92.31.13.3

The problem with the Tatum comparison is that Cade doesn’t project nearly as well, at least not as of now. He could catch Paul George with a strong finish to the season, but PG was the 10th pick out of Fresno State and a somewhat unlikely superstar. If you take a closer look at the stats, it is Tatum who looked like the next Paul George while Cunningham falls into a slightly different prototype. Discouragingly, the player Cade reminds me of most is Evan Turner.

YEARRKPLAYERPOSDMXHTAGEPTSREBASTSTLBLKTOV
20218Cade CunninghamSF3.46’8″19.821.47.13.81.61.14.5
20109Evan TurnerSG/SF3.46’7″21.719.18.65.22.00.94.4

If this strikes you as a hot take consider that once upon a time Evan Turner was the consensus #2 overall who was seen as a safe pick with star potential. It is unlikely that Cunningham busts as hard as Turner because he is a better shooter and broke out at a younger age, but the parallels in terms of their games and statistics are evident and I could see Cade having similar struggles with the length and athleticism of the NBA.

Cunningham’s biggest statistical red flag is one he shares with Turner: extreme turnover proneness. Turnovers are an interesting metric because it can be a proxy for many things. Some of the most turnover prone prospects in recent history were over-eager young creators like Ja Morant, Trae Young, and John Wall while others like Tony Wroten, Javaris Crittenton, and Turner were simply poor decision-makers. There were also lower usage guys like Anthony Davis and Jimmy Butler for whom turnover avoidance at the NCAA level was an indicator of their future offensive stardom. As a result, turnovers have zero correlation to future success in a vacuum but they do factor into my model. Even if I were to eliminate turnovers completely, Cade Cunningham would still be the fourth rated NCAA player in this draft class behind USC big man Evan Mobley, Gonzaga guard Jalen Suggs, and fellow turnover-happy point forward Jalen Johnson of Duke.

Evan Mobley

The #1 prospect according to DMX is Evan Mobley, a highly skilled 7-footer who has played up to his top billing coming out of high school. Mobley has USC in the top-15 in KenPom and his stellar production and efficiency puts him neck and neck with recent first overall picks Karl-Anthony Towns and DeAndre Ayton.

YEARPKRKPLAYERDMXAGEPTSREBASTSTLBLKTOV
2021?1Evan Mobley 7.320.020.111.12.51.03.62.7
201812DeAndre Ayton7.319.924.414.12.00.72.32.4
201511Karl-Anthony Towns7.319.620.013.02.20.94.32.6

In a world where Ayton (and Marvin Bagley) were drafted over Luka Doncic and James Wiseman over LeMelo Ball, it’s easy to imagine Mobley going first overall, and this time it might actually be the right decision.

Jalen Suggs

It could be because he’s a cog on the best college team in years, but the prospect that gives me the warm and fuzzies when I watch him is Jalen Suggs. You may recall that my AAU projections put Suggs as the surprise #2 in the class of 2020 so it is not a huge leap to put him at #1 based on his outstanding freshman season. Suggs seems far more likely to be the next Donovan Mitchell or Victor Oladipo than did last year’s #1 overall pick, Anthony Edwards.

Jalen Johnson

The other, other Jalen of the 2021 draft is the most interesting dichotomy with Cade because they are both 6’8″ point forwards but Johnson bests Cunningham in basically every statistical category.

PLAYERPOSDMXHTAGEPTSREBASTSTLBLKTOV
Jalen JohnsonPF4.46’8″19.520.712.04.52.02.34.5
Cade CunninghamSF3.46’8″19.821.47.13.81.61.14.5

However, from what I’ve seen of Johnson he looks more like Royce White or Slo-Mo Anderson than a Ben Simmons-type game changer worthy of top pick consideration.

New Guys By The Numbers: Class of 2020

1. Cade Cunningham – SF – Oklahoma State
Projected Draft: 2021 (#1 overall)

Cade Cunningham (pictured) has emerged as something of a consensus #1 among grassroots basketball experts and ESPN, who has him as the projected top pick in the 2021 draft. Cunningham, who recently measured in at 6’8″, fits the big, strong point forward prototype that is taking over the NBA, and he was excellent both in the EYBL and as the leader of a dominant Montverde team. The questions for Cade revolve around shooting and volume scoring upside, which could be the difference between the next Grant Hill or a rich man’s Evan Turner.

T-2. Jalen Suggs – SG – Gonzaga
Projected Draft: 2021 (#2 overall)

No, this is not a typo: Jalen Suggs, not Jalen Green, is my projected #2 player in the 2020 class. Suggs is a stud athlete who was also a top quarterback recruit with an offer from Georgia among others. The Gonzaga-bound shooting guard lit up the Under Armour circuit the last two years to the tune of 28/8/8 per 40 minutes.

T-2. B.J. Boston Jr. – SG – Kentucky
Projected Draft: 2021 (#3 overall)

Tied with Suggs for the #2 spot is B.J. Boston, a 6’6″ wing who posted impressive all-around numbers in over 1000 minutes in the EYBL. A projected top-10 pick, Boston will look to follow in the footsteps of Devin Booker, Jamal Murray, and Tyler Herro at Kentucky.

3. Jaden Springer – SG – Tennessee
Projected Draft: 2021 (#4 overall)

Springer was like the Under Armour version of B.J. Boston, posting similar numbers but with slightly better 3pt% and FT%. He’s also one of the youngest players in the class with a September 2002 birthdate.

4. D.J. Steward – PG – Duke
Projected Draft: 2021 (#5 overall)

Duke replaces Tre Jones with my top rated PG in the 2020 class, D.J. Steward. Steward is not a floor general like Jones, but is very intriguing from an NBA perspective as a 6’3″ PG who shot nearly 40% from three and 83% at the line last year in the EYBL.

5. Keon Johnson – SG – Tennessee
Projected Draft: 2021 (#7 overall)

Keon Johnson has become a much hyped prospect and my projections agree, albeit based on a small sample of Adidas Gauntlet stats. I must admit that I didn’t realize Johnson and Springer were both playing at Tennessee this season. That will be a team to watch!

6. Ziaire Williams – SF/PF – Stanford
Projected Draft: 2021 (#8 overall)

Ziaire Williams broke out all over the place in the EYBL in 2019, putting up a 31.7/9.9/4.8/2.4/1.2 per 40 minute stat line. The 6’8″ forward shot just 29% from three but converted a highly encouraging 88% of his 93 free throw attempts.

7. Scott Barnes – SF/PF – Florida State
Projected Draft: 2021 (#9 overall)

Scotty Barnes is a sketchy shooter/scorer, but he is a great passer and glue guy who should be a fit at FSU. In two years playing at the U17 level in the EYBL, Barnes dished out over 200 assists, good for 7.5 per 40 minutes. I am a fan.

8. Jalen Johnson – PF – Duke
Projected Draft: 2021 (#10 overall)

Jalen Johnson is yet another 2020 prospect who fits the point forward mold. Not to be outdone by Scott Barnes, Johnson averaged 7.9 assists to go along with 12.3 rebounds per 40 minutes in the EYBL in 2019. On paper he should make a good compliment to Steward at Duke.

9. Greg Brown III – PF/C – Texas
Projected Draft: 2021 (#11 overall)

Greg Brown is a highly touted prospect out of Texas who chose the Longhorns over going the G-League route. Brown is a freak athlete but a non-shooter at 6’9″.

10. Evan Mobley – PF/C – USC
Projected Draft: 2021 (#12 overall)

Evan Mobley has been rightly dethroned as the top prospect by Cade Cunningham but he still cracks my top 10, if only because I cheated and put 11 guys in. Nevertheless, Mobley is big and talented and I’m open to him being a top pick.