Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Giddey, Sengun, Garuba among top internatio­nal NBA prospects

- By Ken Maguire

It wasn’t that long ago 6-foot-8 Australian point guard Josh Giddey’s objective was to play in the NBL — not the NBA.

The Melbourne native had his country’s National Basketball League in mind when it came to career goals, but his game kept improving — and eventually so did his goals.

“I was good at basketball but I just didn’t think I’d be in the position I am now,” Giddey said. “My goal was to be a good NBL player. The NBA was always a dream, but it didn’t become a reality until probably six to 12 months ago.”

The 18-year-old Giddey is among another crop of intriguing internatio­nal prospects expected to hear their names called in the NBA draft on Thursday. Other projected first-round selections are Usman Garuba, a center/power forward from Spain, and Alperen Sengun, a center from Turkey.

Some NBA fans may not know their names yet, as was the case with some other gems that have come from the internatio­nal pool of players in recent years like Luka Doncic (3rd overall pick in 2018), Nikola Jokic (41st overall in 2014) and Giannis Antetokoun­mpo (15th overall in 2013).

Giddey, considered one of the best passers in the draft, had turned down college offers and instead chose to play this past season for the Adelaide 36ers.

It’s looking like it was a good decision.

In 28 games, he averaged 10.9 points, 7.4 rebounds, a league-leading 7.6 assists, and 3.3 turnovers per game.

“Playing against grown men at an early age I thought would fast-track my developmen­t,” Giddey said in a pre-draft media session online.

He also credits the NBA Global Academy with developing his game and putting him on the radar with scouts.

Here’s a look at some of the top internatio­nal prospects:

With the ball in his hands, he always seems to be under control and makes great decisions.

He’s a lanky 205 pounds and not super explosive like other prospects, but makes up for it with, as they say, a high basketball IQ. “I’m not a big highlight reel kind of guy. I’m a team-first playmaking guard,” he said. “My game is kind of as you see it. Passing is my biggest strength ... in the NBA because the court is so much more spaced and spread out — it’s going to allow me to get into the paint and make some more reads, whether that’s scoring on the read myself or hitting teammates.”

A knock on Giddey is his shooting, which is a work in progress. He shot 43% overall and just 29.3% from the 3-point line in a fairly small sample size (29of 99from long range). He admits he had a slow start to the NBL season.

“It took me a little while to find my feet,” he said “I think the shooting thing about me is a bit exaggerate­d. I started the year so bad it was hard for me to catch up percentage-wise.”

Giddey didn’t make it to Japan for the Olympics, but Usman Garuba is playing in the Tokyo Games for Spain alongside Pau Gasol, Ricky Rubio and company.

With his 6-foot-8, 230-pound frame, defense is one of Garuba’s calling cards. The Real Madrid power/forward center only turned 19 in March and already has two full seasons under his belt in the highly respected Spanish domestic league and the EuroLeague,

He averaged 5.6 points and 5.3 rebounds per game in the Spanish league last season, with slightly lower averages in the EuroLeague. He averaged 7.2 rebounds per game in the EuroLeague playoffs.

But he has shown steady improvemen­t. His EuroLeague averages last season were 4 points, 4 rebounds, 0.7blocks and 0.6steals in just over 16minutes per game — good enough to win the “rising star” award as voted by coaches.

“To me, that was one of the most impressive things — watching what he was doing in the EuroLeague playoffs against Efes — switching out on those guards, it’s tricky,” said Will Voigt, who coached in Germany last season with Bonn. “He not only held his own, but was making plays. To see those flashes at that age, at that level, is pretty impressive. He can guard 1 through 5.”

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Alperen Sengun is a 6-foot9, 240-pound “old school” center/power forward.

His upside. He just turned 19on Sunday, which means he was all of 18 years old when he won the MVP award of the Turkish league last season with Besiktas. He averaged 18.6 points, 8.8 rebounds, and 1.5 blocks in 34 league games in 2020-21. Sengun has great footwork, an array of low-post moves, finishes deftly with both hands, and is a good passer.

He’s not a good long-distance shooter and lacks quickness, especially defensivel­y.

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