top 10 draft lottery bust.

GoldenBoy23

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10. Yi Jianlian(notes), Milwaukee Bucks, taken sixth overall in 2007

Some say Yi was born in 1987. Others contend he might have been born a year earlier, or even three years before. Most contend he's a willowy waste of a 7-foot frame, who refuses to get to the line, work on anything but a low-percentage long jumper, while allowing opponents to walk all over him defensively and on the boards. He makes the fringe of this list merely because he's still in the league, but after two full seasons in Milwaukee and New Jersey, it's pretty clear what Yi is all about. And it ain't unrealized potential.


9. Kedrick Brown, Boston Celtics, taken 11th overall in 2001

He wasn't exactly taken ahead of Jordan, Stockton or Malone; but by my count, Brown was selected ahead of 15 players who started an NBA game last year. An athletic ... something, who was working out of a junior college long enough to impress Chris Wallace and the C's, Brown was an immediate washout.


8. Rodney White, Detroit Pistons, taken ninth overall in 2001


He came with a slightly shinier resume than Kedrick Brown, selected with an Andy Katz stamp of approval by Joe Dumars, who was in his first year as Detroit's personnel chief (after merely working as a consultant the year before). White had skills and an offensive touch, but he never put any work into that game of his. He was sent to Denver before being packaged with Nikoloz Tskitishvili and shipped to the Golden State Warriors for a pick that eventually (after being tossed around by several teams)


7. Yaroslav Korolev(notes), Los Angeles Clippers, taken 12th overall in 2005

I watch a lot of basketball, and as a curious sort, I'm often on the lookout during garbage time for prospects both heralded and unknown. And yet, despite his lottery status, I never saw a second of Korolev's 168 NBA minutes. It's possible that I missed him without knowing it, I fully concede. But I sure can't remember a lick of his NBA career. And it is a career, because even at age 21, he ain't coming back. Mike Dunleavy clearly dropped the ball with this Russian athlete, who shot 28 percent from the field in 34 NBA games.


6. Rafael Araujo(notes), Toronto Raptors, taken eighth overall in 2004

Your humble narrator received all sorts of stick from Toronto backers for calling Hoffa a bust after his rookie year, as if he was ready for a bust-out season at age 25 after turning the ball over on nearly 21 percent of the possessions he used up in 2004-05. Raps fans, as they sometimes do, warmed to a dose of reality a year later when Araujo continued to stink, and Jazz fans got a taste in his third season before he was mercifully left to play overseas. And Rob Babcock? Don't draft players who are two months away from their 24th birthday, unless they're averaging 30 and 20 in the NCAAs. It's not Hoffa's fault; he worked his butt off. He was just a huge reach at eighth overall.


5. Adam Morrison(notes), Charlotte Bobcats, taken third overall in 2006

Morrison is ranked this low (high?) because he's still in the league. He still has a chance, even at age 25, to improve upon his 37 percent lifetime mark from the field. He still has a chance to learn how to rebound, defend, get to the line or pass the ball properly. The unfortunate truth is, were I to compile this list in 2012, Morrison would likely vault to the top three, as he was taken ahead of Brandon Roy(notes), Craig Smith(notes) and Jose Juan Barea(notes) in 2006. The last two players leave you a little cold? Apologies, but they're still (much) better NBA players than Morrison.


4. Nikoloz Tskitishvili, Denver Nuggets, taken fifth overall in 2002


Dirk Nowitzki(notes) was a month away from shooting the Dallas Mavericks to their second consecutive postseason appearance, a fact (Dallas? In the playoffs?) that still tended to boggle the mind in 2002. Peja Stojakovic(notes) was a few weeks removed from, well, shooting his Sacramento Kings out of a Game 7 win over the Los Angeles Lakers. But the ideal remained. Big guy, big shooter, pretty young, gobble him up. The Nuggets got two of the three correct. Skita shot 30.4 percent in 172 career NBA games. Yikes.


3. Kwame Brown(notes), Washington Wizards, taken first overall in 2001

Kwame's the first top pick on this list, which holds quite a bit of weight because a top selection's success or failure will rightfully be measured alongside all that come after him. Every pick. Even the free agents. Luckily for Kwame, the 2001 draft wasn't great shakes in terms of star power, though it was a deep and helpful prospect pool, so his middling NBA career can almost be left to its own merits. And his merits (seven points, 5.6 rebounds in 23 minutes a contest, career) are bloody awful.


2. Entire 2000 NBA draft


You can't pick a single bust-worthy standout. Sure, Stromile Swift(notes) (taken second overall) has disappointed greatly, but what were the Grizzlies' options? Darius Miles(notes)? Marcus Fizer? Chris Mihm(notes)? DerMarr Johnson(notes)? Do you want me to go on? Or do you want me to just mention Jerome Moiso's name and move on with it? It nearly bears mentioning that any time I see a comment wondering how it was, exactly, that a dope like me got this job, I think back to this draft. And I think, "I live-blogged the 2000 NBA draft. I've paid my dues, dammit."


1. Darko Milicic(notes), Detroit Pistons, taken second overall in 2003

He's the total package. His name eases right into the lame jokes ("you could get yourself another Dar-ko Milicic; you know what I mean? This guy knows what I'm talking about!"), he's been an underachieving flameout, he only rose to prominence by taking advantage of well-sourced but not entirely basketball-savvy (at least, then) hoops scribes who were smitten by his ability to spin and dunk in an empty gym, and he was taken ahead of franchise types like Dwyane Wade(notes), Carmelo Anthony(notes) and Chris Bosh(notes). Darko is, quite easily, the biggest lottery bust of the decade.
 
I think it is to early to call Yi a bust. Apparently he has been in the weight room and working out all off-season....it is supposed to be his break-out year ;)
 
7. Yaroslav Korolev(notes), Los Angeles Clippers, taken 12th overall in 2005

<snip>

And it is a career, because even at age 21, he ain't coming back.

I think there is a chance he will be back. He played with the Hawks during their summer camp and showed a great shooting stroke. I think he might be able to hook up with a team at the end of a bench. A 6'9" shooter is always handy.
 
too early for yi and morrison i reckon.. but darko? i doubt he should be 1.. id take him over olowakandi anyday... and who knows what he'll be able to do in ny this season..
 
nah there is a worst player.


some guy who played liek 1 NBA game.

can't remember his name haha.

I think you meant Yinka Dare.

Not top 10 pick but...


What do you think about this ? lol
(He was picked as 14th,1994 - Glenn Robinson, Kidd,Hill, EJ, etc.)

copy1.jpg



Shouldn't Olokwandi be in the top 10?

Interesting thing is nice players were from low picks like Michael Redd and Stephen Jackson.
(Class of 2000)


And I would want to add class of 2001 might be also failure.

Look at this.

(Hey where is Pau Gasol? Pau was picked as 3rd)
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Most Likely to succeed ? NO ! WAY !

This Draft might be one of the biggest totally failure.

Because #1(Kwame), #2(Curry), #4(Tyson Food) were all H.S. Players.
(and all failed)

Might be impacted from former H.S. Pick(Darius Miles).


Good News - Pau Gasol (# 3), Joe Johnson (# 10), and there were Gerald Wallace and Tony Parker as low pick.

Bad News - Bulls abandoned Nice Elton Brand for Tyson Rotten Food.
(After that, Bulls had been in Dark Age ..around 1/2 decade)

Rodney White is also class of 2001.


IMO, Kandiman was not bad like that.

I don't mean Kandiman was great and nice.

But at least they didn't pick Robert Traylor.
(Robert Traylor might be picked as 8th and traded with Dirk Nowitzki(9th). Bucks made big mistake.lol)

And Clippers has done like that to save money or think different like that.

For example, they sent Antonio McDyess to Nuggets for Brent Barry after draft. lol
(In 1995)


too early for yi and morrison i reckon.. but darko? i doubt he should be 1.. id take him over olowakandi anyday... and who knows what he'll be able to do in ny this season..


I think Darko is definitely failure # 1.

Think about this.

Clippers might be able to pick Robert Traylor.


But Pistons might be able to pick David West. David West was 18th pick !!!
(David West is not perfect but at least he is better x 20,000 than Darko who.)

I don't think level of Class of 03(not certain player but most of them) can't over class of 84 and 96.

But that 03 class is one of the niciest class through entire NBA history.

That's the reason why Darko is the worst.
 
i guess if you always refer to the guys of the class who succeeded over the guys who busted then yeah darko would be the biggest bust in the last decade or so just because of dwade, melo, bosh, david west, josh howard, heinrich, mo will etc... i mean that class is HUGE. olowakandi only had dirk, pp, vince and mike bibby (not considering rashard lewis). hmmm... i changed my mind. they both suck
 
i guess if you always refer to the guys of the class who succeeded over the guys who busted then yeah darko would be the biggest bust in the last decade or so just because of dwade, melo, bosh, david west, josh howard, heinrich, mo will etc... i mean that class is HUGE. olowakandi only had dirk, pp, vince and mike bibby (not considering rashard lewis). hmmm... i changed my mind. they both suck

No offense. But you missed Antawn Jamison =)
 
i left him out on purpose. lol... he's a decent player i guess.. 20ppg.. but without caron and arenas, he's just like harrington ('98er isnt he? haha)
 
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