A lot has been made of all the 1st round picks the Orlando Magic gave up to acquire Desmond Bane from the Memphis Grizzlies.
Four 1st rounders is a fairly hefty price. But how hefty is it?
The Orlando Magic were 41-41 this past season, just good enough to get bounced in the 1st round by the Boston Celtics.
Barring certain circumstances, when you're a near .500 team you'll likely be drafting somewhere in the middle of the 1st round -- let's call it Pick 14 to Pick 17 as an arbitrary range for the sake of discussion.
How many 1st round draft picks going in the middle of the 1st round become solid contributors? How many become impactful starters?
Do you think it's likely the Orlando Magic could find their own Desmond Bane in the NBA draft if they remain a moderate contending team drafting in the middle of the 1st round?
Here is a list of players from 2014 through 2023 who were drafted 14th to 17th overall:
2014: TJ Warren, Adreian Payne, Jusuf Nurkic, James Young
2015: Cameron Payne, Kelly Oubre, Terry Rozier, Rashad Vaughn
2016: Denzel Valentine, Juancho Hernangomez, Guershon Yabusele, Wade Baldwin
2017: Bam Adebayo, Justin Jackson, Chris Patton, DJ Wilson
2018: Michael Porter Jr, Troy Brown, Zhaire Smith, Donte DiVincenzo
2019: Romeo Langford, Sekou Doumbouya, Chuma Okeke, Nickeil Alexander-Walker
2020: Aaron Nesmith, Cole Anthony, Isaiah Stewart, Aleksej Pokusevski
2021: Moses Moody, Corey Kispert, Alperen Sengun, Trey Murphy III
2022: Ochai Agbaji, Mark Williams, AJ Griffin, Tari Eason
2023: Jordan Hawkins, Kobe Bufkin, Keyonte George, Jalen Hood-Schifino
To be sure, there are some valuable players there.
There are also quite a few duds.
The irony here: Desmond Bane himself was the 30th overall pick of the 2020 NBA draft -- so I'm not suggesting diamonds cannot be found or developed among the later picks -- as Bane has become one of the better guards in the league. I just wonder if we're being a bit too optimistic about the non-lottery talent in the NBA draft these days. And maybe Orlando wasn't as foolish as it seemed to gamble on a more proven commodity.
Discuss.

Four 1st rounders is a fairly hefty price. But how hefty is it?
The Orlando Magic were 41-41 this past season, just good enough to get bounced in the 1st round by the Boston Celtics.
Barring certain circumstances, when you're a near .500 team you'll likely be drafting somewhere in the middle of the 1st round -- let's call it Pick 14 to Pick 17 as an arbitrary range for the sake of discussion.
How many 1st round draft picks going in the middle of the 1st round become solid contributors? How many become impactful starters?
Do you think it's likely the Orlando Magic could find their own Desmond Bane in the NBA draft if they remain a moderate contending team drafting in the middle of the 1st round?
Here is a list of players from 2014 through 2023 who were drafted 14th to 17th overall:
2014: TJ Warren, Adreian Payne, Jusuf Nurkic, James Young
2015: Cameron Payne, Kelly Oubre, Terry Rozier, Rashad Vaughn
2016: Denzel Valentine, Juancho Hernangomez, Guershon Yabusele, Wade Baldwin
2017: Bam Adebayo, Justin Jackson, Chris Patton, DJ Wilson
2018: Michael Porter Jr, Troy Brown, Zhaire Smith, Donte DiVincenzo
2019: Romeo Langford, Sekou Doumbouya, Chuma Okeke, Nickeil Alexander-Walker
2020: Aaron Nesmith, Cole Anthony, Isaiah Stewart, Aleksej Pokusevski
2021: Moses Moody, Corey Kispert, Alperen Sengun, Trey Murphy III
2022: Ochai Agbaji, Mark Williams, AJ Griffin, Tari Eason
2023: Jordan Hawkins, Kobe Bufkin, Keyonte George, Jalen Hood-Schifino
To be sure, there are some valuable players there.
There are also quite a few duds.
The irony here: Desmond Bane himself was the 30th overall pick of the 2020 NBA draft -- so I'm not suggesting diamonds cannot be found or developed among the later picks -- as Bane has become one of the better guards in the league. I just wonder if we're being a bit too optimistic about the non-lottery talent in the NBA draft these days. And maybe Orlando wasn't as foolish as it seemed to gamble on a more proven commodity.
Discuss.
