mock draft暫定首輪中後段的Donovan Mitchell 2.0?
Ebuka Okorie has earned his spot at the NBA Draft Point Guard Roundtable
https://lovemytakes.com/p/ebuka-okorie-has-earned-his-spotAccording to CBB Analytics, the freshman had the greatest impact on team turnover percentage in the country. With Okorie on the floor, the team had an 11.9 turnover percentage (94th percentile) compared to a 20.5 turnover percentage with him off the floor (1st percentile).
Top 20 players in team TOV% impact per CBB Analytics.

Okorie was the sun for the Cardinals, and teams guarded him like it. He was often face-guarded, blitzed, or flat-out doubled in pick-and-roll actions, yet he still got downhill and to his spots.
Despite all of the attention from defenders, he used his speed, change of pace, dynamic handle, low center of gravity, and excellent contact balance to generate 0.992 points per drive, a 47.4 rim rate, and 6.4 unassisted rim attempts per 100 possessions.
As much as I am against aesthetic bias when evaluating basketball players, Okorie does have the “look” of a star guard going against competition he’s too good for. For my money, he is one of the five best advantage creators in the class.
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He was often driving into a cramped paint, as the Cardinals routinely played two non-spacing bigs, which forced him to finish amongst the trees a ton. He was able to find success because of his ability to embrace contact, finish with either hand, and draw fouls (45.9 free-throw rate).
Okorie was also one of the most dynamic players in transition in the country last season, which was integral to keeping Stanford's offense afloat amid a lack of ball-handling and playmaking talent.