
20. Aaron Holiday (UCLA, PG, Junior)
Though he turns 22 years old in September, Holiday could sneak into the teens. He's generated interest with his consistent three-point shooting (.422 career), improved playmaking and defensive toughness.
19. Donte DiVincenzo (Villanova, SG, Sophomore)
Give him a role that plays to his strengths, and DiVincenzo can contribute right away as a secondary playmaker, shot-maker and pesky defender. He's a high-floor, low-ceiling prospect who'll impact games with his athleticism, versatility and energy.
18. Robert Williams (Texas A&M, C, Sophomore)
Williams' identity is clear, which has its pros and cons. On the plus side, he's one of the draft's top athletes and lob catchers, and he'll block shots and thrive alongside a quality passing point guard. On the downside, his skill level is limited, and it doesn't appear he'll ever be a scoring or shooting threat.
17. Collin Sexton (Alabama, PG/SG, Freshman)
We're not convinced Sexton is the guard coaches want running their offense. But there is no doubt he'll put pressure on opponents with his downhill attacking, streak shooting and competitive nature.
16. Lonnie Walker (Miami, SG, Freshman)
Walker could receive looks as high as No. 9 from the New York Knicks for his upside, even though his skills and feel appeared suspect last season. He's an explosive athlete and convincing shooter who'll use the next few years to improve on the ball as a shot-creator and secondary playmaker.
15. Miles Bridges (Michigan State, SF/PF, Sophomore)
Bridges will benefit from moving to power forward, where he can exploit his explosiveness and shot-making and avoid being guarded by wings around the perimeter.
14. Kevin Huerter (Maryland, SF, Sophomore)
Huerter will be out two months after having hand surgery. It doesn't affect his evaluation, though. At 6'7", he's one of the draft's top snipers and is capable of creating for teammates and separating into pull-ups and step backs.
13. Jerome Robinson (Boston College, SG, Junior)
Robinson's 24.3 points per game against the ACC would have received more recognition if Boston College weren't lousy. He could stand to improve his defense and shot selection, but Robinson is highly skilled at scoring out of pick-and-rolls or isolations by shooting off the dribble or slicing to the rack. He's a microwave scorer.
12. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Kentucky, PG, Freshman)
Gilgeous-Alexander has fans across the league for his size (6'6", 180 lbs), length (6'11 ½" wingspan) and versatility—strengths not typically associated with point guards. He needs to improve as a shooter, particularly since he lacks explosion, but Gilgeous-Alexander is a fine facilitator and crafty scorer who can guard both 1s and 2s.
11. Kevin Knox (Kentucky, SF/PF, Freshman)
Knox led Kentucky in scoring (15.6 ppg) at 18 years old by working off the ball as a spot-up shooter who can attack closeouts, toss up floaters and pull up into jumpers. He'll need to show NBA coaches he can defend and rebound his position, though.
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