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Porzingis 2.0? The Next Giannis? NBA Scouts Predict the League's Next Unicorn
JONATHAN WASSERMAN
1. Bamba
2. Bagley
3. Ayton
"I'd take Bamba over Bagley, but there is one more out there I'd take hands down over either."
Within the unicorn family, DeAndre Ayton fits the mold of an Embiid or Karl-Anthony Towns—long, nimble centers with bodies built for the paint and inside-out skill sets to score in volume.
Listed at 7'1", 250 pounds with a 7'5 ½" wingspan, his measurements practically match up with DeAndre Jordan's from the 2008 combine (6'11", 250lbs, 7'6" wingspan). Jordan recorded a 30.5" max vertical and 7.5 percent body fat. According to Arizona coach Sean Miller, Ayton's body fat is near six percent and his vertical just hit 43 ½".
The eye test backs Miller's claims. Athletic, chiseled and long, Ayton looks like he was put together in some basketball lab.
The unicorn potential kicks in once his perimeter game fully develops. He has been shooting threes for some time now. You got the impression in high school he just became bored with dunking.
A quick, uncontestable release on his jumper is convincing, even if he doesn't shoot a high percentage right away. Like Towns and Embiid, he's become a threat to pick-and-pop behind the arc, spot up or rise and fire over his man from the elbows or short corners.
With quick spins in the post and the ability to separate into quality one-handed looks around the key, Ayton can score from all three levels, as well as control the glass and block shots.
Staying fully engaged at both ends will be his top priority, but if we're talking about talent and upside, few non-NBA players have more. Ayton is the closest to becoming the next great scoring center.