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Can the Celtics please draft Kevin Seraphin?

(Forgive the highlight — it’s from a year ago. Serphin has bulked up significantly since.)

As part of our draft coverage, we are profiling wings and big men the Celtics might be interested in with the 19th pick. Next up is Kevin Seraphin, a center from France. We made these profiles using our own personal knowledge of the prospects combined with research from numerous sites, including NBADraft.net and Draft Express.

Draft Express projection: 22nd pick NBADraft.net: 32nd pick

Beast.

I’m officially on the “Draft Kevin Seraphin” train. Where else are the Celtics going to find a 6’10″, 270-pound wrecking ball of strength and athleticism, at the 19th pick? Let me tell you, nowhere.

There are a lot of intriguing big men prospects projected to be drafted in the later part of the first round — Solomon Alabi, Larry Sanders, Hassan Whiteside and Daniel Orton among them. But none of them are as physically ready (read: strong and athletic) as the French Beast, Seraphin.

You’ve probably never heard of the French Beast, so let me give you a little background. He’s from France (obviously), plays in France’s top league, and had a little bit of a disappointing season this past year (only 6.5 points and 6.5 rebounds in 20.5 minutes during EuroCup play, although he was starting for France’s top team). He’s 20 years old, had a huge showing at the Nike Hoops Summit (where a team of top European youngsters plays a team of top American high schoolers), and looks like a freakish combination of Amare Stoudemire and Nene. He is big, strong, and has rise. He pounds the offensive glass, hammers home finishes, and runs the floor too. With the body of a Greek god, the wingspan of an even larger man than himself and only five years of basketball experience under his belt, Seraphin oozes potential, absolutely oozes potential. According to Draft Express, he also has good hands, good touch around the basket and “is known as a smart and humble player.”

And the best part? He actually knows what he’s doing defensively. Listen to Draft Express: “He shows a much greater comfort level on the defensive end, where he’s a terrific presence inside the paint with his superb combination of length, strength and athleticism. He displays nice timing when rotating from the weak side and is especially effective at hedging pick-and-rolls, while still having the mobility to recover back onto his man thanks to his nimble feet and nice lateral quickness. He’s difficult to post up due to his wide frame, and he puts in a good effort on top of that. This puts him in a pretty rare class of prospects when considering his physical tools.”

Now, that’s not to say he has no faults. Seraphin is hardly a go-to player in the post. He lacks the footwork to be a reliable back-to-the-basket scorer. Draft Express notes that his focus sometimes drifts (I remind you, he’s only 20 years old). Even though he’s in the draft this year, he might not leave for the NBA next season. According to SI’s Ian Thomsen, Seraphin has had injury problems in the past (although it might just be a recent injury that only kept him out of play for a couple weeks and didn’t affect his draft status.) Seraphin also isn’t as great a defensive rebounder as he is on the offensive glass.

But I pose the question again: Where else are the Celtics going to find a 6’10″, 270-pound wrecking ball of strength and athleticism, at the 19th pick? I don’t care that he’s raw offensively — so are all the other centers the Celtics could draft. I don’t care this his focus drifts sometimes — he’s young, that’s what young players do. I don’t even care that he might not play in the NBA next season — none of the other centers the C’s could draft at #19 would help next year, either. (Okay, I admit it. I’d like Seraphin to play in Boston next season if the C’s draft him — they need frontcourt help right away, and he’s the only player in the draft I see helping them.)

The French Beast is the next Nene, with a higher ceiling. If you want the Celtics to pass that up, with a pick as low as 19th, be my guest. But you’ll regret it when this kid turns into a monster. And for next season? He’s the C’s best bet to replace the almost-definitely-retiring Rasheed Wallace in the draft.

I suggest the Celts pick Seraphin, make sure he comes to the States, and then let him contribute right away as he blossoms into a legitimate piece for the future.

Related posts:

  1. Celtics potential draft pick: Solomon Alabi
  2. Celtics potential draft pick: Daniel Orton
  3. Celtics potential draft pick: James Anderson
  4. Celtics potential draft pick: Hassan Whiteside
  5. MW: Draft talk – Celtics looking at James Anderson?

categories Celtics Blog, Draft Central, Featured | Jay King | June 21, 2010

categories 2010 NBA Draft, Boston Celtics, Kevin Seraphin

7 Responses to “Can the Celtics please draft Kevin Seraphin?”

  1. Jay P says:
    June 21, 2010 at 3:26 pm

    Yes because drafting international players has worked out so well recently (*Cough* Rubio *Cough*)

    This team needs help in the front line, like now. Is he worth the risk of him not coming state side this year? Actually, my gut says yes, but still, it’s not an easy decision.

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  2. Jay P says:
    June 21, 2010 at 3:37 pm

    Also, some tidbits to mull over before you get over-excited here, from NBADraft.net:

    “French bigman Kevin Seraphin showed up and put on a jersey and got measured but hardly should be considered a camp participant (he may not stay in the draft anyway as he was visibly favoring his injured leg while walking and had a small sleeve on his knee. The injury will also keep him from working out for teams as well as Summer League games).”

    “A 55% free throw shooter … Averaged 52% from the floor, too low for a player taking most of his shots close to the basket … Lacks much versatility: face the basket, ball handling, vision and passing are all extremely raw/limited … A decent shot blocker but nothing out of the ordinary … His huge (7-3) wingspan and leaping ability should allow him to produce more blocks but he’s not very quick off his feet and lacks great timing and instincts on blocked shots … Some feel he’s more of an undersized center than a power forward due to his skill level and foot speed … ”

    Reading that, and given the fact that he’s an international player, so even if the knee doesn’t limit him, there’s no guarantee he comes to NBA next year, I’m not so sure on him.

    I still think Whiteside is a better choice if we’re looking for a high risk/high reward type player.

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    • Jay King says:
      June 21, 2010 at 5:11 pm

      I saw that, but have read on ESPN.com that the injury would only keep him out a few weeks. If the Celtics can convince him to come over to America (and Draft Express notes he wants to come over), he’s far more league-ready than Whiteside. Whiteside is going to need a lot of seasoning an a whole bunch of square meals to get any type of playing time in the NBA. Seraphin could already come and play a little.

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  3. Jay P says:
    June 21, 2010 at 5:27 pm

    I dunno, Seraphin seems pretty one dimensional to me. Big guy who just jumps around a lot. That’s not going to work in the NBA, there are bigger guys who jump higher. He has no mid-range game, no face-up moves, has trouble finishing (52% FG) and is very limited passing.

    Again, this is all offensive. He’s obviously a greater impact defensively than Whiteside, since he has the bulk to defend the most, and seems very capable for hedging and recovering, and understands defensive rotations pretty well. I just wonder where the ceiling on his offensive game is, where as Whiteside, basically has no ceiling.

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    • Jay King says:
      June 22, 2010 at 7:43 am

      Why does Whiteside have a higher ceiling than Seraphin? Because he averaged 13 ppg at Marshall this past season?

      I can see the potential in Whiteside too — it’s hard to miss. But this Seraphin guy is a bigger sure thing and has just as much potential. Plus, most teams in the NBA can normally use a 6’10″, 270-pound bruiser who “jumps around a lot” and is solid defensively.

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  4. Jay P says:
    June 22, 2010 at 9:36 am

    Whiteside has a mid-range game. Decent 15 ft jump shot, developing baby-hook, both of which are flat out impossible to block because of his freakish 7’7 wingspan and just downright obscenely high release point.

    Offensively, the guy has no ceiling, if he ever learned a turn around jump shot like KG shots, with the wingspan he has and release point, he’ll be unstoppable. Defensively, obviously he needs to bulk up to be able to stop anyone in the post, but just due to his natural timing and length, he’s already a presence for altering shots.

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    • Jay King says:
      June 22, 2010 at 9:42 am

      Patrick O’Bryant was the same way. I’m far more confident Seraphin will make an impact — both instantly and down the road — than Whiteside.

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