New York Daily News

Seeing Suggs as No. 1

- BY MIKE RANDLE

After a fantastic NCAA Tournament capped by a Baylor Bears championsh­ip, college hoops fans now reset the batteries and turn their attention toward the NBA Draft on July 29.

The 2021 draft class is loaded with talent, with several potential players having multi-year All-Star upside.

Most bettors are debating whether to back Oklahoma State’s Cade Cunningham, USC’s Evan Mobley, or G-League sensations Jonathan Kuminga or Jalen Green as the first overall pick. But there is tremendous value on a prop bet backing Gonzaga’s Jalen Suggs as the top NBA selection in July.

The rationale? simple.

ELITE TALENT

Very

Suggs was an elite five-star prospect coming out of Minnehaha Academy in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota. At 6-foot-4 and 205 pounds, he has NBA size and still doesn’t turn 20 until June 3.

Suggs brings incredible length and strength to the position, translatin­g his elite football skills into a versatile twoway style on the court.

Suggs possesses elite speed with the basketball, as proven by his legendary 3-pointer to defeat UCLA in the Final Four.

Suggs can create with both hands, is solid from 3, and is also a ferocious defender. Many high-level players are poor on the defensive end, yet Suggs’ ball pressure is one of the most underrated parts of his game.

Over Gonzaga’s last nine games, Suggs recorded two or more steals on six occasions. He is an as good, if not better, athlete than any other player being considered as the No. 1 overall pick.

SUPERIOR EFFICIENCY

There is a huge chasm of underappre­ciation for just how good Suggs was this season. Cunningham and Mobley posted strong numbers, but both were the focal point of their team’s offense. As a comparison:

Cunningham: 35.4 MPG, 20.1 PPG, 6.2 RPG, 3.5 APG, 1.6 SPG, 43.8% FG, 40% 3P

Mobley: 33.9 MPG, 16.4 PPG, 8.7 RPG, 2.4 APG, 2.9 BPG, 57.8% FG

Suggs: 28.8 MPG, 14.1 PPG, 5.5 RPG, 4.6 APG, 2.0 SPG, 50.2% FG, 33.3% 3P

Suggs averaged over five fewer minutes than Mobley and almost seven fewer minutes per game than Cunningham. His field goal percentage was higher than Cunningham’s while averaging more steals per game. The Gonzaga freshman is also a solid 76.8% shooter from the freethrow line.

In Gonzaga’s Elite Eight win over USC, Suggs almost tallied a triple-double, finishing with 18 points, 10 rebounds, and eight assists. In its title game loss to Baylor, Suggs tied for the game’s leading scorer with 22 points and added two steals despite sitting early in the game with two quick fouls.

Suggs has shown he can fill up the box score in every way possible and has done so despite playing significan­tly less than his two college counterpar­ts.

CLUTCH GENE

It’s not quantifiab­le, but Suggs certainly has the “clutch gene.”

We have seen Suggs perform on national television under intense pressure, something that both Kuminga and Green cannot say. While there were limited fans at all the games, Suggs has shown throughout the season that he plays his best in the biggest moments.

Suggs was the best player on the floor in the first college game he ever played. The freshman scored 24 points with eight assists and two steals in the Bulldogs’ 10290 rout of Kansas on Nov. 26. He then scored 27 points with six rebounds, four assists, and three steals in Gonzaga’s 9988 thrashing of Iowa. That performanc­e by Suggs came off a COVID-19 pause after Gonzaga hadn’t practiced for two weeks.

Suggs was the best all-around player on Gonzaga despite playing with a consensus first-team All-American in Corey Kispert and fellow second-team All-American in Drew Timme. Oftentimes, Suggs was the second or third option on his own team, thus limiting his upside statistica­lly.

Yet, when the Zags needed a big play or basket in the NCAA Tournament, Suggs delivered every time.

Lost in the excitement of his game-winning shot was this incredible defensive play and pass just moments earlier.

 ??  ?? Jalen Suggs
Jalen Suggs

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