
Itās fun to debate who the top NBA players drafted in the 2010s are. But who are the best draft prospects of the last decade?
A fun game thatās thrown around from time to time on NBA Draft Twitter is to debate the merits of the top prospects of the last few years against each other. Is Zion Williamson the best prospect ever? Who would you rather build around, Luka Doncic or Karl-Anthony Towns? How would you rank Lonzo Ball, Ben Simmons and Doncic as passers?
Keeping a catalog of your rankings is very important for keeping perspective from year to year. Certain drafts are stronger than others, and itās important to consider how well say, the top tier of prospects in 2013 stack up to Anthony Davis and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist in 2012. The draft can spit out Luka Doncic at pick No. 3 one year and Otto Porter Jr. another, and valuing prospects from the current year against how you remember prospects from past years is valuable information for determining projected outcomes.
Now, hindsight bias is a thing, and this exercise isnāt infallible. Eight years out, it is difficult to remember that there once wasnāt a consensus that Giannis Antetokounmpo would go in the first round because projecting him from the Greek second division to the NBA at age 18 was nearly impossible. Just because he hit doesnāt make him one of the top prospects of the last decade; just like Kawhi Leonard growing skills like rabbits reproduce doesnāt mean that he should have gone No. 1 overall. The name of the game in the draft isnāt figuring out who is going to be the best NBA player five years out; thatās nearly impossible, as proven nearly every year. Itās instead trying to determine who has the best chance of becoming a star and improving your team when they get to the NBA level.
Since the 2020 NBA Draft might be the weakest in recent memory, it might be fun to remember the good times; when there were several prospects better than the Anthony Edwards/LaMelo Ball choice looming for whoever wins the 2020 NBA Draft lottery, whenever that occurs. So to take a break from the grind of trying to parse a bad draft class, letās expand that classic Draft Twitter question: What would a 30-pick first round of draft picks from all of the 2010sā classes look like?
Remember, for this exercise, weāre remembering these players as prospects, and not necessarily considering their NBA outcomes. Outcomes can vary wildly by which team a player is drafted by, and not every player is going to be the same guy if he lands on two different teams. So instead of considering where these guys ended up, weāre considering them as they were at the time of the draft. In these rankings, Anthony Davis hasnāt played a minute for the New Orleans Pelicans; Joel Embiid is still injured with his first navicular fracture; and Giannis is still a total unknown projected to go in the middle of the least top-heavy draft of the decade, and therefore isnāt included on this list.