We have made it all the way to the finish line. No more talk. Here is my final Big Board as the 2023 NBA Draft is upon us!
One final time, my tiers are for saying this is how I would set my order for the 2023 NBA Draft. While I may think players within a certain tier could go in a different order, I would argue strongly that a team SHOULD NOT draft players in the tiers below them. So, the Tiers for my Big Board are: Alien Tier: Do you NOT KNOW the name of Victor Wembanyama?; Tier 1: Always in Contention for the Top Spot; Tier 2: They ARE the Third Pick; Tier 3: NBA Starter Skills Pack; Tier 4: Major Potential, Major Concerns; Tier 5: Stick Them In the Rotation; Tier 6: I Believe! I Believe!
Let me break down just exactly what these new tiers mean. The Alien Tier was really created for Victor Wembanyama to emphasize how we have never seen a player like this before and how if you are lucky enough to win the #1 pick this year YOU DON’T PASS HIM UP! Tier 1: Always in Contention for the Top Spot are players that in other non-Victor Wembanyama drafts have the talent to be considered the #1 overall pick. Tier 2: They ARE the Third Pick are players in this draft that I think have a legitimate case to be the third overall pick in this draft and I would not argue if they did end up there on draft night.
Tier 3: NBA Starter Skills Pack are the prospects I believe have multiple skills in their profile that project them as NBA starters one day. Tier 4: Major Potential, Major Concerns are the players I acknowledge have a high ceiling and I understand why some people have them highly ranked, but I see major concerns in their profile that knock them down my board. Tier 5: Stick Them In the Rotation are players who think have AT LEAST one skill that will keep them in an NBA rotation for their career. And last, but not least, Tier 6: I Believe! I Believe! are the players that I think will go undrafted, but who I would get on the phone pronto to make a Two-Way player because they have skills I want to develop in the G League.
Alien Tier: Do you NOT KNOW the name of Victor Wembanyama?
1) Victor Wembanyama, C/PF Metropolitans 92
So recently someone dug up ONE CLIP of Wembanyama back in Februrary getting dunked on in FIBA Play. This is where we end with Victor Wembanyama, what Tyler Rucker of No Ceilings called Overthinking Season. Digging up months old tape and isolating ONE PLAY to try and criticize the top player in this Draft is ignorant at best and trolling at worst. I mean, what I think about this clip suddenly getting attention again can be best summed up by Draft EXPERT Sam Vecenie:
If you fail to recognize Victor Wembyama’s greatness at this point, that’s on YOU. While NO prospect is Bust-Proof, it cannot be said enough that we have NEVER seen a prospect like Victor Wembanyama before. ESPN’s Jonathan Givony reported Victor measure in at 7’4” tall WITHOUT shoes and has an EIGHT FOOT wingspan. THAT alone is something the NBA has never seen. Then you add into that a functional handle, the ability to take any shot on offense, and some of the best defensive instinct you will ever see…the excitement cannot be big enough!
Tier 1: Always in Contention for the Top Spot
2) Scoot Henderson, PG/SG G League Ignite
Looks like Scoot might have lost the fight for #2. Or has he? Until TODAY the reports coming out about Charlotte were that the Hornets and Michael Jordan were sold on Brandon Miller. Like I said, UNTIL TODAY when it’s being put out there that they actually might prefer Scoot.
This will be a VERY informative look back in a few years about the Question of Drafting for “fit” versus “need.” As I discussed in-depth in the Big Board 5.0., Miller makes perfect sense for the Hornets with his shooting and fit at either forward spot and Scoot seems to have skills and intangibles that are almost identical to LaMelo Ball—and what IS exactly identical is their position of point guard.
To me, however, what is lost in this conversation is LaMelo Ball’s POTENTIAL versatility. While I agree he and Scoot are both point guards by nature, they DO NOT have 100% overlapping skills and size. LaMelo is a great volume three-point shooter. While many of his attempts come off the dribble, he DID lead Charlotte last year in catch-and-shoot threes with 5.5 attempts per game at 40.4%. That fit COULD work IF LaMelo can get more off the catch jumpers to help space out the floor for Scoot.
Defensively is where there are MAJOR question marks, however. LaMelo EASILY has the size to complement Scoot as he is 6’7” tall. A move over into shooting guard with that size and his shooting abilities should be an easy ask. BUT, LaMelo is only 180 pounds. Couple this with Scoot being listed at 195 pounds and this is a slim backcourt. While Scoot is a jacked 195 pounds, being 6’2” and YOU’RE the bulkier defender between you and your 6’7” shooting guard is asking for the opposition to pick on both of you in the pick-and-roll. Make no mistake, Scoot and LaMelo WILL be pick-and-rolled TO DEATH in year one together if Scoot comes to Charlotte as both guards die on screens.
Offensively, though, I buy more into the fit of Scoot and LaMelo because LaMelo COULD be more of an off-ball shooter as his numbers there are really good. Yes the defense will be trash, but most rookies defense is trash anyway and finding a player like Scoot that can run the ship and being a good athlete at point guard is a rare commodity. WHO KNOWS what Charlotte will do, but I definitely can see a world in which LaMelo and Scoot help each other thrive on offense.
Tier 2: They ARE the Third Pick
3) Jarace Walker, PF/SF Houston
4) Cam Whitmore, SF/PF Villanova
5) Ausar Thompson, SF/SG Overtime Elite
6) Amen Thompson, PG/SG Overtime Elite
7) Brandon Miller, PF/SF Alabama
After MUCH deliberation and watching and re-watching the film of every prospect in this tier’s film, I have come to the conclusion that…I love Jarace Walker. Defensively versatile, offensively underrated, WITH top physical tools I think Jarace is a rare commodity in the NBA Draft.
Before I dive into Jarace’s defense, let’s talk about his offense for a minute. While I get that Jarace’s offensive stats are not going to WOW you, he was the SECOND LEADING SCORER for a Houston team that was 33-4 and ended the season ranked #2 in College Basketball. He also dished out 65 assists and had 82 offensive rebounds. He took 101 three-point attemtps—more than Anthony Black, Judah Mintz, and even more than Scoot Henderson has taken IN THE LAST TWO YEARS! Oh and Jarace also posted a better percentage from three than all of those guys, in addition to posting a better three-point percentage than Cam Whitmore and Jalen Hood-Schifino. While I am NOT gonna say Jarace is going to be some offensive superstar, I say all this to say: STOP SLEEPING ON JARACE’S OFFENSE!
Defensively I WILL say Jarace has superstar potential there. I have been saying for a while now that Jarace falls somewhere between OG Anunoby and Bam Adebayo. Jarace is defensively versatile like both NBA players. Jam Hines even argued on the Woodward Pistons Draft Show that Jarace IS the kind of defender who can effectively guard LeBron and KD. Jarace indeed passes the ball like a Bam and has a 7’2.5” wingspan and lower body strength at 248.6 pounds to stop NBA big men in their tracks.
To give you an idea the level of impact Jarace Walker’s defense can have Houston’s defense went from allowing 2233 total points in 2021-22 to 2126 this past season once adding Jarace. That is a jump in rank from 190th to 46th. And no, THIS IS NOT HYPERBOLE as the only additions to Houston’s rotation from the past season to this one were two freshman: Terrance Arceneaux and Jarace Walker—and Arceneaux only played 471 total minutes. EVERYONE ELSE was a returning upperclassmen who was on the Houston squad last year. The cherry on top of all of this is Walker did all this with no other player listed over his own height of 6’8”.
Ladies and Gentlemen I will fight ANYONE on the potential of Jarace Walker in the NBA. He has great all around offensive skill with shooting and passing to fit into any scheme while showing rare defensive ability to cover on the perimeter, hold down the frontcourt without anyone taller than him as a teammate, and the IQ to pick apart teams on either end of the court. While I hope and pray my Detroit Pistons make him the 5th overall pick tonight, whoever the team that drafts Jarace Walker will have the next NBA Defensive Superstar!
Tier 3: NBA Starter Skills Pack
8) Keyonte George, SG/PG Baylor
9) Taylor Hendricks, SF/PF UCF
10) Gradey Dick, SG/SF Kansas
11) GG Jackson, PF/C South Carolina
12) Anthony Black, PG/SG Arkansas
13) Cason Wallace, PG/SG Kentucky
14) Jordan Hawkins, SG UConn
15) Kobe Bufkin, PG/SG Michigan
16) James Nnaji, C Barcelona
17) Bilal Coulibaly, SF/SG Metropolitans 92
18) Dereck Lively II, C/PF Duke
19) Dariq Whitehead, SG/SF Duke
So if you didn’t know by now, I REALLY value defense in my draft prospects. So it should come as no surprise that Cason Wallace became one of my favorites in this draft class early on. Stamped with the Jrue Holiday comparison early on that is now a plaque welded on to his chest with pride, Cason Wallace is a fantastic guard defender who I think will be the next in a LONG line of Kentucky prospects who thrive once the Cal Clamps are removed from them in the NBA.
Cason’s defense is top notch and comes into the NBA with teams buying into him 100% as a great guard defender. Listed at 6’2.5” without shoes, weighing in at 195 pounds, with a 6’8.5” wingspan he has similar size to a Scoot Henderson, but the tape shows that this is a guy who LOVES eliminating people on defense. He has great lateral movement and top notch agility to stay with his man and his physical tools allow him to guard the 1 or the 2 guard spot.
One look at Cason’s shot chart, however, and you see he still has a lot of work to do on offense.
The areas where Wallace is blue, he is OCEAN DEEP blue. Under 22% from three in three different spots on the court and under 32% from three different spots in the midrange is not a good thing for any guard hoping to make it in the NBA. Wallace will have to be more consistent with his jumper first and foremost—especially from three. While he started the year shooting 41.9% from three on 4.6 attempts from long range in the first 16 games of the season, Wallace closed the final 16 games with a putrid 24.5% from three on 3.3 attempts per game.
Wallace did suffer an ankle injury late in the year which does need to be taken into consideration. And his final 10 games REALLY dragged down his overall percentages as far as they could possibly go. Even when he was healthy, however, Cason Wallace did not get to the rim very often with only 17.6% of his offense coming at the rim. He will need to be less jumpshot dependent if he wants NBA teams to buy into him as more than a good role player who can space out the floor for his teammates.
Honestly, though, when I look at this shot chart, what I see is another Kentucky player asked to fill a role and do things to expand his game rather than stay in his comfort zone. Cason had to make up for his 5’9” point guard, Sahvir Wheeler, who took 41 total attempts all season; AND Cason also had to keep putting up threes to space the floor for two big men in Oscar Tshiebwe and Jacob Toppin who DO NOT shoot threes. When Antonio Reeves is the only other guy out there taking more than 2 three-point attempts per game, you HAVE to take threes under any and all circumstances just to try and make your offense work.
The case is best laid out by Bobby Douglas in this video explaining the Kentucky NBA assembly line and Cason Wallace being the newest shiny product ready made to Ball.
Tier 4: Major Potential, Major Concerns
20) Jalen Hood-Schifino, PG/SG Indiana
21) Nick Smith Jr, SG/PG Arkansas
22) Rayan Rupert, SF/SG New Zealand Breakers
23) Jordan Walsh, SF/PF Arkansas
24) Jett Howard, SF/SG Michigan
25) Brice Sensabaugh, PF/SF Ohio State
In the last Big Board Update I asked if Scoot was starting to be overlooked, well he is not alone in being passed over for a more recent riser. If you asked about international prospects in February, Rayan Rupert was THE name many brought up after Victor Wembanyama. While I do like a lot of Rupert’s game, I understand why he has been passed over once the season ended and Bilal Coulibaly took his spot.
Rupert’s physical tools are fantastic first and foremost. Measuring in at 6’6” without shoes, 193.2 pounds, with a 7’2” wingspan Rupert is THE ideal NBA wing prospects desire every year. That wingspan absolutely makes its presence known in defense where Rupert swallows up smaller players and walls off taller ones. Rupert is so good on defense the Breakers even tasked him with being the primary on-ball defender in their playoff run in the NBL.
While I am not going to say Rupert is a defense only prospect at the moment…he’s not that far off from getting stamped with that label. Scoring just 6.6 points per game in 20 games in the NBL regular season shows how little opportunity Rupert was given. Shooting under 25.1% from three-point range in the regular season and the playoffs shows the severe limitations Rupert has on offense and why he wasn’t given many opportunities on a professional team.
Rupert is undoubtedly a project and his NBA stock is based largely on upside when it comes to his offense. That’s not to say people should be all out on him—I still very much believe and he would be one of my targets if I had an extra first round pick. Rupert JUST turned 19 on May 31 so he has plenty of time ahead of him and he has a very Mikal Bridges-like profile that you want to buy into and reap the benefits of a fantastic wing defender who will reward your patience in his offense in just a few years time.
Tier 5: Stick Them In the Rotation
26) Tristan Vukčević, C/PF KK Partizan
27) Toumani Camara, PF/SF Dayton
28) Olivier Maxence-Prosper, PF/SF Marquette
29) Kris Murray, PF/SF Iowa
30) Colby Jones, PG/SG Xavier
31) Brandin Podziemski, SG/PG Santa Clara
32) Seth Lundy, SF/PF Penn State
33) Julian Phillips, SF/PF Tennessee
34) Max Lewis, SF/SG Pepperdine
35) Jordan Miller, SF/SG Miami
36) Marcus Sasser, PG/SG Houston
37) Chris Livingston, SF/PF Kentucky
38) Ben Sheppard, SG/SF Belmont
39) Isaiah Wong, PG/SG Miami
40) Jaylen Clark, SG/SF UCLA
41) Jaime Jacquez, PF/C UCLA
42) Jalen Wilson, PF/SF Kansas
43) Trayce Jackson-Davis, C Indiana
44) Julian Strawther, SF/SG Gonzaga
45) Omari Moore, SG/PG San Jose State
46) Sidy Cissoko, SF/SG G League Ignite
47) Terquavion Smith, SG NC State
48) Noah Clowney, C/PF Alabama
49) Leonard Miller, PF/SF G League Ignite
50) Jazian Gortman, PG/SG Overtime Elite
51) Nathan Mensah, C San Diego State
52) Adam Flagler, PG/SG Baylor
53) Mike Miles, PG TCU
54) Andre Jackson, PG/SF UConn
55) Landers Nolley II, SG/SF Cincinnati
56) Sir’Jabari Rice, SG/PG Texas
57) Jalen Slawson, PF/SF Furman
58) Jalen Pickett, PG/SG Penn State
One of the players I waited until after the NCAA Underclassmen Deadline to really dive into was Olivier Maxence-Prosper. While any forward with the potential to succeed in a small-ball 5 role on defense will get the “Obligatory PJ Tucker Comp” whether or not their game warrants it, I AM giving Olivier Maxence-Prosper the ACTUAL PJ Tucker comp because his game is very reminiscent of the versatile big man. I mean just look at his shot chart for starters.
A solid corner three-point shooter and a GREAT finisher around the basket, these are the PJ Tucker starter skills pack! All jokes aside, Prosper has a great supplementary offensive game that teams can easily buy into. Why the PJ Tucker comp is so apropos, however, is due to Olivier’s measurements. Standing 6’6.75” tall without shoes, weighing in at 212.4 pounds, and possessing a 7’1” wingspan Prosper has the physical tools and defensive tape to match a PJ Tucker role almost one-for-one. Olivier is never afraid to get physical on either end of the court as evidence by his 168 rebounds and 151 trips to the free throw line.
While this whole pitch IS on saying Prosper COULD be the next PJ Tucker, like PJ it will take time to remake his game. Olivier was MAINLY the forward defender who had to cover the best forwards and allow Oso Ighodaro to stay in the paint and protect the rim. Offensively, Prosper was only the FOURTH leading three-point shooter on the team. Really he was allowed to roam around and make things happen on both ends many a night. In the NBA, he DEFINITELY needs to keep improving the corner three, find ways to get to the rim, and become a consistent screener since he is NOT someone who profiles who can create for himself or others with the ball in his hands.
Coach Spins of the Box-And-One profiled Olivier-Maxence Prosper as having actual potential of a player that can guard 1 through 5. Prosper has great defensive potential, but definitely has to iron out the shooting and continue to work on getting better and better as a weakside rim protector to one day be blocking shots and draining corner threes like PJ every playoff series.
One of the most forgotten names in the 2023 Draft Class is Jazian Gotman out of the Overtime Elite. JGort was highly recruited coming out of high school in South Carolina, but ultimately decided to take chance with OTE and continue his development there in Atlanta. Scoring 13.9 points per game, dishing out 3.9 assists per game, and pulling in 4.8 rebounds per game this past season, Gortman made a big impression in the OTE.
JGort is an athletic guard who loves to attack both on both ends of the court while also having a solid pull up jumper. The first thing that stands out when you watch JGort’s film is his athletic ability. Driving in and jamming the ball down for an And1, cutting to the basket and catching a lob from his teammate, or running down the lane for a chasedown block, Gortman uses his athleticism in all facets on the basketball court. If you need further convincing, look no further than JGort’s 2.5 steals per game. Trust me when I say Jazian will get after it!
Raw is the best way I would describe what JGort needs to work on. While I list his pullup jumper in his intro, it is also something that was flashed but not yet consistent. To give you an idea of JGort’s jumper, he shot 32.9% from three during the regular season and 25.0% from downtown during the playoffs. He needs to continue to refine his mechanics and work on his shot selection there. Also, in terms of his defense, Gortman WILL fly around on D and even played full court defense for a lot of the season. What he did not do was operate within a structured defense where he had to understand he cannot blow his assignment gambling for steals.
Why I put JGort in the top 58 is that you CANNOT find guards with his combination of athleticism and beginnings of a pullup game. While he measured in at only 6’1” at the G League Elite Camp, he had an IMPRESSIVE 6’10” wingspan and 8’3” standing reach that gives him a huge advantage at point guard. Couple that with everything I laid out here and that screams NBA point guard. As he proved at the NBA G League Elite Camp, JGort is an NBA level athlete with a great amount of projectable skill that can grow in an NBA system.
Tier 6: I Believe! I Believe!
59) Hunter Tyson, PF/C Clemson
60) Mojave King, SG/SF G League Ignite
61) Matt Bradley, SG/PG San Diego State
62) Drew Peterson, SG/SF USC
63) Deandre Williams, SF/PF Memphis
64) Kobe Brown, PF/C Missouri
65) Jaylen Forbes, SG Tulane
66) Amari Bailey, PG/SG UCLA
67) Azuolas Tubelis, PF/C Arizona
68) Qua Grant, PG/SG Sam Houston State
69) David Singleton, SG/SF UCLA
70) D’Moi Hodge, SG/PG Missouri
71) JT Shumate, SF/SG Toledo
72) Armaan Franklin, SG Virginia
73) Caleb McConnell, SF/SG Rutgers
74) Nate Laszewski, PF/C Notre Dame
75) Kevin Obanor, PF/C Texas Tech
76) Joey Hauser, PF Michigan State
77) Connor Vanover, C Oral Roberts
78) Tevian Jones, SG/SF Southern Utah
79) Taevion Kinsey, SG/PG Marshall
80) Jake Stephens, C Chattanooga
81) Pete Nance, PF/C North Carolina
82) Ricky Council IV, SG/SF Arkansas
83) Antoine Davis, PG/SG Detroit Mercy
84) Justin Powell, SG/SF Washington State
85) Zyon Pullin, PG/SG UC-Riverside
86) Adama Sanogo, C/PF UConn
87) Efe Abogidi, C/PF G League Ignite
88) Mouhamed Gueye, C/PF Washington State
89) Patrick Gardner, PF/C Marist
90) Nadir Hifi, PG Le Portel
91) Tosan Evbuomwan, PF/SF Princeton
92) Oscar Tshiebwe, C Kentucky
93) Drew Timme, C Gonzaga
94) Tyler Robertson, PG/SF Portland
95) Tajion Jones, SG/SF UNC Asheville
96) Kamaka Hepa, PF/SF Hawaii
97) Kaodirichi Akobundu-Ehiogu, PF/C Memphis
98) Alex Fudge, PF/SF Florida
99) Damezi Andreson Jr., PF/SF Detroit Mercy
100) Jack Nunge, C/PF Xavier
Seeing as I AM based out of Tucson, Arizona it is finally time for my breakdown of one of our most beloved Wildcats Azuolas Tubelis. A great scorer inside the two-point arc and a natural athlete, Azuolas has a lot of NBA talent coming into the league.
Leading the Wildcats in scoring this past season, Tubelis scored 19.8 points per game. This puts Tubelis is rare company as he is one of only ten players on this Big Board to score over 19 points per game. Azuoulas mainly scored his points inside the two-point arc, at the rim with a post game that is second to none. Tubelis was 180 of 257 shots at the rim for 70.0% and added to that in the paint by shooting 53 of 122 for 43.4% in that area as well. Add that together and Azuolas Tubelis shot 61.5% on shots at the rim and in the paint.
I also have been saying ALL season that Azuolas is a criminally underrated athlete in the open court. If he got the ball in transition, that was a guaranteed dunk and two points on the board. For teams that want to play fast, the Tubelis is the exact kind of big man you would want running the lanes in transition. Azuolas also flashed passing chops with 151 assists the past two seasons and made a concerted effort to get easy looks for the centers he played next to. And, although Tubelis played next to a center his entire Arizona tenure, he still managed to be a great rebounder. His final season at Arizona saw him pull in a career high 320 rebounds!
Why I, and many others, remain lower on Azuolas in the NBA is because of a lack of both defense and a three-point shot. Tubelis never averaged over 0.7 blocks per game and is not a good lateral athlete. Part of the reason Azuolas had such low block numbers was that he mostly played power forward next to a center who was only asked to stay in the paint on both ends. BUT, when Tubelis did get the chance to man the paint at center he did not show the lower body strength or shot blocking skills to man the middle.
Tubelis is also one of the most reluctant three-point shooters out there. Despite having very good touch as a post scorer and occasionally busting out a mid range jumper, Azuolas never took more than 42 attempts from three-point range in a season. What’s worse is that he three-point attempts decreases every year at Arizona. Even more concerning is that Azuolas started this past season shooting 47.4% from downtown on 1.1 attempts per game in the first 17 games, only to finish the final 18 games taking 13 TOTAL attempts from three-point range and drained *drum roll*…ONE of those three-point attempts. That is 7.7% if you’re wondering.
Azuolas absolutely NEEDS a three-point shot if he can’t defender centers well. More importantly, Tubelis has to commit to putting up threes as well. He went from January 13, 2023 until March 16, 2023 without a SINGLE make from three-point land. While I always want to pump up my fellow Wildcats here in Tucson, Tubelis might end up being a Euroleague superstar instead without much improved defense and/or consistent three-point shot.
Shoutout the City of Detroit! No better way to end the 2023 Big Board for me than one of my guy’s playing Dee-troit Basket-ball in college, Antoine Davis. The man who was just FOUR POINTS SHORT of breaking Pistol Pete Maravich’s All-Time NCAA Scoring Record, Antoine Davis is not just a bucket, he is A Bucket AND 1. Just look at this shot chart:
When you take 712 shots and you only have 2 areas in blue OR white on your shot chart, you are a CLEAR cut above the rest as a scorer. Antoine Davis is also not just some ultra-inefficient volume scorer as he has posted True Shooting percentanges over 56.5% for the last three seasons.
Davis also has a clear cut NBA-ready skill with his three-point shooting. Davis might be the only prospect I will ever profile to average OVER 10 three-point attempts every year in college and shoot 37.5% from downtown on 1566 three-point attempts. Whatever three-point shot you can think of, Davis has taken it and drained about a hundred of them under live fire. Oh and did I mention Antoine is a career 89.2% shooter from the free throw line? In fact he has THREE seasons of shooting OVER 90% from the line. Antoine Davis is as LEGIT of a shooter as they come.
One glance back at that shot chart and you can see the one blue area highlight Antoine’s biggest area of concern: size. Measuring in at 6’0” and 164.6 pounds with a 6’3.5” wingspan Davis’s lack of size hurts his NBA potential on both ends of the court. Sticking with the shot chart, we see Davis struggles getting to the rim and finishing. Davis IS a jumpshot reliant offensive option. While he will bust out an occasional floater and/or runner, if his jumper is not falling, then Davis offers little else on offense.
That size REALLY hurts Davis’s chance on defense, however. Any player under 6’2” is going to get hit with size concerns. What can help ease SOME of those concerns is what we say with Jazian Gortman—a large wingspan. Davis does not have that, and to make matters worse, he is among the slimmest players in the 2023 NBA Draft Class. It is hard enough to try and overcome being short with a small wingspan, but being so skinny to boot paints a target on your back as THE guy who will get picked on again and again on defense.
This is not to say Antoine Davis’s chances of becoming an NBA Player are incredibly small. With slim guys like Bones Hyland and Isaiah Joe succeeding in the NBA due to being ELITE level shooter, Davis has a clear path to an NBA role. With a handle better than Joe’s and a level below Bones and the fact Davis is BY FAR the best passer out of these three, don’t count out a future where Antoine Davis rains threes on an NBA Court near you.
Ahéhee' so much for being with us ALL Draft Season and We hope and pray you enjoy tonight’s 2023 NBA Draft!