2024 Aggregate Mock Draft: Zac Risacher, Nikola Topic, Cody Williams, Reed Sheppard rising

HoopsHype’s 2024 NBA mock draft with Nikola Topic, Cody Williams, Reed Sheppard rising with scouting reports from NBA executives and scouts.

With March Madness upon us, HoopsHype has updated where the top prospects currently stand for the 2024 NBA Draft by compiling 10 mock drafts from ESPN, The Athletic, Bleacher Report, The Ringer, NBA Big Board, Yahoo Sports, CBS Sports, Sports Illustrated, SB Nation, and USA TODAY’s For The Win.

HoopsHype also spoke with several NBA executives and scouts for their insight on the prospects for the third edition of the aggregate mock draft. The consensus from a majority of NBA talent evaluators is this draft class isn’t as top heavy with franchise-altering talent, but is deep with several potential sleepers to be selected.

An explanation for HoopsHype’s Draft Predictor from colleague Alberto de Roa, who contributed research to this story, can be found here.

NOTE: These rankings reflect the composite score to get a feel for the overall consensus, not our own opinion. For example, if a player was the first pick on a publication’s mock draft, he received 60 points. If a player was second, he received 59 points, and so on. We then tabulated the total number of points for each player’s consensus ranking.

POINT GUARDS / SHOOTING GUARDS /
SMALL FORWARDS / POWER FORWARDS / CENTERS

2024 Aggregate NBA Mock Draft: Ron Holland, Isaiah Collier, Alex Sarr battle for No. 1 pick

HoopsHype’s 2024 aggregate NBA mock draft features Ron Holland, Isaiah Collier, and Alex Sarr battling for the No. 1 overall pick. The story includes scouting reports from NBA executives and scouts for each player, as reported by Senior NBA Insider Michael Scotto.

With the calendar flipping to 2024, HoopsHype has updated where the top prospects currently stand for the NBA Draft by compiling nine mock drafts from ESPN, The Athletic, Bleacher Report, NBADraft.net, Yahoo, CBS Sports, Sports Illustrated, SB Nation, and USA TODAY’s For The Win.

HoopsHype also spoke with multiple NBA executives and scouts for their insight on the prospects for the second edition of the 2024 aggregate mock draft. The consensus is this draft class is underwhelming compared to years past.

“You’ll see a lot of guys getting drafted at positions they shouldn’t and teams trading out,” an NBA executive told HoopsHype. “Some guys who would’ve been second-round picks last year if they were lucky could go in the first round this year.”

An explanation for HoopsHype’s Draft Predictor from colleague Alberto de Roa, who contributed research to this story, can be found here.

NOTE: These rankings reflect the composite score to get a feel for the overall consensus, not our own opinion. For example, if a player was the first pick on a publication’s mock draft, he received 60 points. If a player was second, he received 59 points, and so on. We then tabulated the total number of points for each player’s consensus ranking.

Potential No. 1 NBA Draft pick Ron Holland: ‘I feel like I’m the one that stands out because of my motor’

Potential No. 1 NBA Draft pick Ron Holland discussed how he can impact the NBA as a rookie next season, player comparisons, a scouting report of his game, why he’s the top prospect in the draft, and more in an interview with HoopsHype Senior NBA Insider Michael Scotto

Heading into the start of 2024, G League Ignite forward Ron Holland is a potential No. 1 overall pick with teammate Matas Buzelis, Perth Wildcats big man Alex Sarr, and USC’s Isaiah Collier.

At the G League Showcase, Holland spoke with HoopsHype about why he chose to play for the Ignite instead of going to Texas University, how he can impact the NBA as a rookie next season, player comparisons, a scouting report of his strengths and weaknesses, why he’s the top prospect in the draft, his career goals at the NBA level, and more in an extensive interview.

NBA rumors: Knicks, Raptors, Lauri Markkanen, Dejounte Murray, Hornets, more

Reporting on Knicks trade targets, Immanuel Quickley’s future, Dejounte Murray’s trade market, Lauri Markannen, possible front office changes for the Hornets, two-way conversion candidates, and more from HoopsHype Senior NBA Insider Michael Scotto

The G League Showcase, the NBA’s unofficial winter meetings summit ahead of the Feb. 8 trade deadline, was filled with chatter about potential trade candidates, front office changes, and more.

Below is a look at the latest intel gathered by HoopsHype, including updates on New York Knicks trade targets and the future of Immanuel Quickley, Dejounte Murray, Lauri Markanen, Pascal Siakam, OG Anunoby, the Hornets, and more.

Matas Buzelis: Choosing the G League over college was the best choice for me

The NBA community is marveling at Victor Wembanyama, but next year’s draft promises fresh talent too, including Matas Buzelis. Buzelis is bypassing college to play for the G League Ignite, honing his skills for the NBA jump. The potential No. 1 …

The NBA community is marveling at Victor Wembanyama, but next year’s draft promises fresh talent too, including Matas Buzelis. Buzelis is bypassing college to play for the G League Ignite, honing his skills for the NBA jump.

The potential No. 1 draft pick sat down with HoopsHype to talk about his life as a professional basketball player, the different advice he’s gotten from NBA players past and present, the upcoming release of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, and more.

Life in the G: Minor league basketball and the relentless pursuit of the NBA

Zeroing in on the G League’s Birmingham Squadron and four of its players – Jared Harper, Joe Young, Zylan Cheatham, and Malcolm Hill – during the historic 2021-22 season, Life in the G: Minor League Basketball and the Relentless Pursuit of the NBA …

Zeroing in on the G League’s Birmingham Squadron and four of its players – Jared Harper, Joe Young, Zylan Cheatham, and Malcolm Hill – during the historic 2021-22 season, Life in the G: Minor League Basketball and the Relentless Pursuit of the NBA details the relentless pursuit of the NBA dream. This excerpt focuses on the assignment of NBA players to the G League.

“You can’t play where you want to go if you’re not perceived as somebody who just plays hard as shit,” head coach Ryan Pannone said.

Once again, the Squadron had lost. And once again, Pannone found himself stressing the same message in the ensuing film session. An embarrassing clip played on the screen – after an ugly turnover, no one on the team had hustled back on defense.

“Look at the guys who have made it from here to the NBA,” Pannone continued. “Alex Caruso… I’m sure everybody saw the quote he had.”

Player-development coach Andrew Warren pulled it up on his phone and read it aloud. “The stuff I do is not always glamorous,” Caruso, the Chicago Bulls guard and former G Leaguer, had told reporters. “It’s stuff that wins basketball games. That’s what I love doing – winning.”

At 2-5, clearly Squadron players weren’t doing the winning stuff, like hustling back on defense after an ugly turnover. “It’s the little things that win games that truly fucking matter,” Pannone said. “You can go down the line of the guys who have made it.”

Pannone was right. If you performed such an exercise, you would find a lot of guys just like Caruso – gritty, tough, reliable, blue-collar players: Gary Payton II, Robert Covington, Danny Green, Fred VanVleet, Jonathon Simmons.

Before film ended and practice began, Pannone announced that the Pelicans would be assigning three players for the team’s next game (also against the Mexico City Capitanes): third-year center Jaxson Hayes, rookie forward Trey Murphy III, and undrafted two-way guard Jose Alvarado. “This is the G League,” Pannone said. In other words, this is what you should expect. “I understand how that impacts some of you individually.” Rotations would change. Minutes would decrease for certain players. Hayes and Murphy would be inserted into the starting lineup, replacing Malcolm Hill and James Banks. Alvarado would get extended run off the bench, cutting into Joe Young’s playing time.

Some frustration was to be expected in these situations. Assignments often brought tension to G League locker rooms—even more so in the D-League days, when there were fewer one-to-one affiliations and teams were shared among multiple NBA franchises. Back then, D-League coaches had to earn the trust of various NBA front offices.

“As a D-League team, you had to develop relationships—you may have had two or three NBA teams that worked with you,” said Jay Humphries, who coached the Reno Bighorns from 2008 to 2010. “But you had to develop a relationship with the management of the NBA team to make them comfortable. And typically during that time, when a player was brought down to your team, he would play a majority of the minutes, plays were going to be really focused on him and [based on] the conversations that you’ve had with the coaches, management, general manager of the team that’s sending him down about working on the things that he needs to get back.”

Even as the D-League evolved into the G League, the expectation remained that assignment players, or two-way players, would receive ample opportunity to shine, regardless of how that impacted others on the roster. It created a strange dynamic. An awkward dynamic. “I had a really positive experience in Sioux Falls. To be honest with you, I think part of that was the fact that I was on a two-way,” Miami Heat guard Duncan Robinson, who played thirty-three games with the Sioux Falls Skyforce in 2018–19, said. “I think it’s a little bit different. Not that I got preferential treatment, but I was kind of in and out, especially toward the second half of the year, and when I was in Sioux Falls and playing with the team, I was featured a lot on offense, plays were run for me, and all that sort of stuff. I’m very aware that I was in a privileged position relative to some of my peers out there.”

In some cases, assignment players did receive forms of preferential treatment, even when it wasn’t requested. “I remember on normal planes, as an NBA player, I would get first class, but the other guys, they would be in eco,” said former Houston Rockets center Clint Capela, who was assigned to the Rio Grande Valley Vipers during the 2014–15 season. “Sometimes I felt kind of weird. For some players in the U.S., when they’re like top players or whatever, it’s normal for them to have special favors. But for me, where I’m from in Europe, usually if we’re on the same team, everybody is treated equally. I felt kind of weird to be the only one in first class, the only one with my own [hotel] room, and I remember my per diem was more than everybody else’s too.”

Capela tried to support his teammates however he could, paying for dinners and passing on insights about the NBA. His mindset on the court, though, was to dominate everyone. “I felt that I had a duty to prove myself, to prove that I deserve to have that kind of sticker on my back that I’m an NBA player, even though I was younger,” he said. “I always went hard at practice, made sure to dominate every single time, and to also let the Houston Rockets know that every time I go out there and play, they have to pay attention also. I also felt that I had that duty to be dominant all the time.”

That was a mentality shared by most assignment players. Coming from the NBA, those players were supposed to be better than everybody else. “I do think that when you’re sent down from your NBA team, that is the attitude that you have to have in order to not stay there,” Humphries said. “I don’t belong here with these guys.” Of course, if it leaned more toward cocky than confident and inspired a selfish approach on the floor, that attitude had the potential to spark conflict. Squeaky Johnson even recalled one player who was sent down to the Austin Toros getting into an argument with a coach and shouting, “I make more money than you!” Which, to be fair, was definitely true.

Mix some or all of these aspects together – the mindset of assignment players, the minutes they took from everyday G Leaguers, the preferential treatment they sometimes received – and the results could be… interesting. Or, as longtime G Leaguer Scotty Hopson put it with a laugh, “That’s a recipe for a disaster.” Hopson had experienced both sides of the arrangement; he had been the G Leaguer whose minutes were reduced due to the transfer of an assignment player, and the assignment player who took minutes from a G Leaguer.

“Now when I see somebody not handling it the way I would, I go say something,” Hopson explained, referencing the situation from the perspective of a G Leaguer, “because I’ve been there before and I don’t want them to suffer from a lack of humility, you know what I mean? Because it’s not that deep – it’s not about you right now. I would hate to see somebody fail from that as opposed to their performance.”

LOOK: G League Fall Invitational with top prospects Matas Buzelis and Ron Holland

Last week, the G League Ignite hosted its first-ever NBA G League Fall Invitational, playing two games against the NBL’s Perth Wildcats on September 6 and 8. There was a lot of buzz with the new elite prospects of the Ignite of Matas Buzelis and Ron Holland going up against another elite top talent in Alexandre Sarr of the Wildcats.

Check out photos from the two games below.