TIER 1: TOP O' THE CAKE1. Minnesota Timberwolves: Kyrie Irving, PG, DukeThe Wolves are, predictably, in a tough spot. They don't have a good point guard on the roster -- Jonny Flynn's story has been written, but he's been unproductive in two seasons. Luke Ridnour is aging and struggled with injury last season. But if David Kahn really thinks Ricky Rubio is coming stateside, can you pick another lottery point MUT 18 Coins guard? Irving's the best prospect on the board, but taking him would complicate the Ricky relationship, at least at the onset. But I'm not sure Minnesota could take Derrick Williams
No. 1, given the presence of Kevin Love and Michael Beasley. Love-Williams could be a deadly combo, provided the Arizona product can guard small forward and Love can learn how to guard, period.2. Cleveland Cavaliers: Derrick Williams, F, ArizonaThe Cavs are the opposite of the Wolves: for Minnesota, neither of the top pick options make total sense. For Cleveland, "both please." I think very few teams would take Williams over Irving at the very top, the Cavs included. A common thread among the worst teams in the NBA is the lack of a top-flight point guard. The Cavs are thin at forward, too --
Antawn Jamison is on skates out of town, and J.J. Hickson is a solid but unspectacular option. The small forward spot is destitute in C-Town.TIER 2: MYSTERIOUS DELICACIES3. Toronto Raptors: Jan Vesely, F, Czech RepublicThe international talent stream is full this year, and Vesely is one of the more intriguing prospects. Jon Givony of DraftExpress wrote the definitive Vesely profile for SI.com earlier this year. A lanky, athletic forward who can sprint the floor, defend and finish? That's the NBA ideal, if not the execution. (Yes, I have noticed that all eight teams left in the NBA Playoffs are more content in the halfcourt than an up-tempo game.)
Washington Wizards: Enes Kanter, C, TurkeyKanter played even less than Daniel Orton, which is an impressive feat made possible only by the NCAA's iron fist. The Turkish big man made his name in the United States a year ago at Hoop Summit, and given Washington's frontcourt question marks -- is JaVale McGee a part of this new core, or not? -- he could be a good fit.5. Sacramento Kings: Jonas Valanciunas, C, LithuaniaThe Cheap Madden NFL 18 Coins 6'11 Lithuanian is considered an energy player who activity earns more production than his skills. That said, he's one of the more productive per-minute players in Europe despite being 18, and while you'd love to have some finesse from your tall players, you can't teach passion. Jonas seems to have it, according to all reports https://www.mmogo.com/