Intro: The Book of Isiah: Unraveling The Biggest Myth in Sports

Chapter 1: The  Roster:  Worst  in  Sports  History?
Chapter  2:  The  Past:  Rewriting  Isiah’s   Resume
Chapter 3: The Salary Cap Myth: Pure Media Madness
Chapter 4: The "Mistakes":  Mountains from Mole Hills
Chapter 5: The  Drafting  Genius:  Isiah  the  Prophet
Chapter 6: The Trades: Turning Weatherspoon Into Wine  

 
 

Chapter 5

The Drafting Genius: Isiah the Prophet

 

  

Pop Quiz: Which Knick’s drafting era has yielded the higher sum total quality of draft picks? 

 A) 14 Years Prior to Isiah (1990-2003)     OR 

B)
    3 Years into the Isiah Era (2004 – 2006)

 
 Media Backlash?: Okay, in fairness, even some of his harshest media critics begrudgingly concede that Thomas is a “good drafter”. But it is time to “tell it like it is”. Thomas is not merely “good”, he is simply the best in the business. Hey Media – Do Your Homework!: The answer is B. He has been able to: pluck superstars from notoriously thin draft crops, find steals very late in the draft, and have the courage to select highly unpopular picks over media and fan favorites. He has yet to have even one single 1st round “bust pick” in his entire drafting career. Any thorough review of his drafting record will show that Thomas, with all due respect to Toronto GM Bryan Collangelo, has an unparalleled eye for young talent.
 
  1. “End of an Error” — Thomas Takes Over: In his first three years (too early to include 2007 draft) Thomas drafted more talent than the Knicks had selected in the previous 14 years whose drafting incompetence netted only two starters and no star players from 1990 to 2004. Consider that since 1990 the Knicks 1st round draft picks were: Jerrod Mustaf, Greg Anthony, Hubert Davis, Charlie Ward, Monty Williams, John Wallace, Walter McCarty, Dontae Jones, John Thomas, Frederic Weis (one pick ahead of Ron Artest), Nene Hilario (traded on draft day; 2 picks ahead of Amare Stoudemire;), and Michael Sweetney. Now all Knicks fans should follow these directions: 1) Please read that list again… 2) Rinse and repeat; 3) Send Isiah a thank you note.
 
  1. McGrady in a Haystack: Isiah’s selection of perennial all-star Tracy McGrady with the 9th overall pick in 1997 draft should go down as one of the greatest selections in NBA draft history. Sure, your grandmother could have selected Tim Duncan with the 1st pick, but what about after that? The #2-#8 picks were: Keith Van Horn, Chauncy Billups, Antonio Daniels, Tony Battie, Ron Mercer, Tim Thomas, and Adonal Foyle. Insert McGrady here. The next three picks were: Danny Fortson, Tariq Abdul-Wahad, and Austin Croshere. Besides Billups, these 10 surrounding picks spend most of their time at the end of an NBA bench or watching games from their couch at home.
 
  1. Late-Pick Heists: With the 43rd pick in the second round of the 2004 draft, Thomas nabbed Trevor Ariza as his first-ever Knick draft choice. Basketball isn’t football and draft picks after #40 aren’t even supposed to make NBA rosters. Unfortunately, his emerging talent is developing in an Orlando Magic uniform. The very next year Thomas nabbed rebounding extraordinaire David Lee with the final pick in the 1st round. Lee is already drawing comparisons to previous power forward Knick greats Charles Oakley and Dave DeBuscherre. If Mardy Collins, last year’s 29th pick, is able to add a jump shot in the next couple of years to his solid all-around game, he will add to Thomas’ resume of draft larceny. If not, the selection should still be a solid one.
 
  1. The Guts Picks: Considering the intense media and fan pressure to pick more popular individuals (see Marcus Williams and Ed O’Bannon), the selections of Renaldo Balkman in 2006 and Damon Stoudamire in 1995 may very well be Thomas’ most impressive draft feats. Had Thomas been wrong in either case, he would have been the subject of endless draft ridicule that would have defined his legacy. Thus far, Balkman has outplayed the 10 selections before him, and Stoudamire became Rookie of the Year as the first ever pick for the expansion Toronto Raptors.  With the previous pick in that same draft the expansion Grizzlies also made their first ever draft selection: …Bryant “Big Country” Reeves. Oh yes, and O’Bannon was out of the NBA after three seasons. Considering the media mockery, if there ever was a NBA drafting upset equivalent to Ali-Foreman a generation after Ali-Liston over all of the so-called "experts", Balkman and Stoudamire were it.
 
  1. Quality in Any Draft: With the 2nd pick in 1996 Thomas chose Marcus Camby who has become a rare defensive, rebounding, and shot-blocking (leading league 3 times) force along the lines of Dikembe Mutombo. Only yearly injuries have robbed Camby of perennial all-star caliber status. Channing Frye and Nate Robinson, selected #8 and #21 in 2005, have been solid contributors that are in line with their draft slots. However, Frye has since been traded as his full range of skills (read: post-up) cannot be maximized in an offense centered around Eddy Curry who was acquired shortly after Frye’s selection.  
 
  1. Not One “Bust Pick”: Thomas has done the near drafting impossible in being “flop-free” across all his 1st round picks. This fact where Thomas distinguishes himself from nearly every other GM who also possesses a stellar drafting record. Peers such as Bryan Collangelo (see Zarko Cabarkapa), Jerry West (see Troy Bell & Dahntay Jones), and Geoff Petrie (see Tariq Abdul-Wahad), all had at least one “bust pick” while high quality players were selected shortly after those selections.
 
Final Verse: Thomas is not a just a “good drafter”, but might even contend for the best in NBA history this side of Red Auerbach. He is a drafting GENIUS, and the media should start using this word to describe his drafting acumen and break the silent media code of only applying the "genius" tag to white managers and executives (see Tony Larussa, Bill Belichick, Jerry West, Charlie Weis, etc.), often an undeserving tag at that.

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