Can the Draft Lottery compete with the Treadmill of Mediocrity?

Editor's note: As was pointed out to me on Twitter, before expansion the "treadmill pick" would actually be earlier in the draft in previous years before the NBA expanded. I'll be back with an updated version of this post soon to reflect that.

Which is the future star?

One of my biggest pet peeves in sports is that popular theories and ideas catch on far before the numbers have been crunched. One of the more popular such ideas in modern sports lore is the so-called "Treadmill of Mediocrity" named by Kevin Pritchard, former GM of the Portland Trail Blazers. The worst spot to be in, allegedly, is a mediocre playoff bubble team every year. After all, you have to get a top pick to get good in the NBA, or so we're told.

I was sidetracked by this notion while doing research for my weekly column on top box scores last night. Giannis Antetokounmpo recorded yet another triple-double last night (and guaranteed himself a spot on the list again.) While looking at Giannis' basketball-reference page, I noticed he was drafted with the fifteenth spot in the NBA draft, which I'll be calling "the treadmill spot." If winning the draft lottery is getting the number one pick, then the most mediocre team is the one with the fifteenth pick or first outside of the draft lottery.

I noted on Twitter that Giannis was selected fifteenth in 2013 while Anthony Bennett was selected with the coveted number one pick. The treadmill theory would have us believe the Bucks were in worse shape in terms of getting a star relative to the Cavaliers. Bennett is "washed out" of the NBA,  and Giannis is getting compared to Oscar Robertson. Color me skeptical. I decided to examine two sets of players - the number one picks in all of the drafts since 1990*, and the number fifteen picks. Let's see what we found!

Rookie Scale Contracts

I decided to compare players' Wins Produced across their first five eligible NBA seasons. I consider this the "rookie contract" as it's the amount of time a team is guaranteed the rights to a player if you consider the fifth-year restricted free agency qualifying offer.

Draft Year Draft Pick Player Rookie Contract Wins Produced Rookie Contract WP48
1990 1 Derrick Coleman 35.3 0.136
1990 15 Dave Jamerson -1.4 -0.112
1991 1 Larry Johnson 42.2 0.138
1991 15 Anthony Avent -2.3 -0.023
1992 1 Shaquille O'Neal 67.7 0.248
1992 15 Anthony Peeler 1.8 0.011
1993 1 Chris Webber 36.3 0.163
1993 15 Doug Edwards 0.5 0.03
1994 1 Glenn Robinson 10.5 0.038
1994 15 Eric Piatkowski 12.8 0.107
1995 1 Joe Smith 10 0.041
1995 15 Brent Barry 24.6 0.139
1996 1 Allen Iverson 14.5 0.05
1996 15 Steve Nash 20.6 0.131
1997 1 Tim Duncan 64.4 0.213
1997 15 Kelvin Cato 20.3 0.171
1998 1 Michael Olowokandi -4.2 -0.021
1998 15 Matt Harpring 23.9 0.145
1999 1 Elton Brand 55 0.188
1999 15 Frederic Weis 0 0
2000 1 Kenyon Martin 13 0.052
2000 15 Jason Collier -2.3 -0.051
2001 1 Kwame Brown 12.8 0.082
2001 15 Steven Hunter 8.4 0.099
2002 1 Yao Ming 41.2 0.179
2002 15 Bostjan Nachbar 0.6 0.007
2003 1 LeBron James 66 0.201
2003 15 Reece Gaines -0.7 -0.06
2004 1 Dwight Howard 77.9 0.261
2004 15 Al Jefferson 26.3 0.139
2005 1 Andrew Bogut 33.3 0.152
2005 15 Antoine Wright 0.5 0.004
2006 1 Andrea Bargnani -14.7 -0.064
2006 15 Cedric Simmons -0.8 -0.058
2007 1 Greg Oden 8.3 0.22
2007 15 Rodney Stuckey 12.3 0.06
2008 1 Derrick Rose 25.6 0.12
2008 15 Robin Lopez 10.2 0.087
2009 1 Blake Griffin 36.4 0.159
2009 15 Austin Daye 1.5 0.019
2010 1 John Wall 34 0.132
2010 15 Larry Sanders 12.6 0.131
2011 1 Kyrie Irving 27.7 0.133
2011 15 Kawhi Leonard 60.6 0.312
2012 1 Anthony Davis 41.5 0.228
2012 15 Maurice Harkless 13.7 0.116
2013 1 Anthony Bennett -1.6 -0.048
2013 15 Giannis Antetokounmpo 14.2 0.101
2014 1 Andrew Wiggins 2.4 0.022
2014 15 Adreian Payne -3.3 -0.138
2015 1 Karl-Anthony Towns 7.6 0.178
2015 15 Kelly Oubre -1.1 -0.097

The pinnacle of mediocrity

Now, let's get something clear, in the 26 seasons the current draft lottery has been in place, the number one pick has easily been better than the fifteenth pick. The number one picks beats the number fifteen pick 18-8 in terms of producing a better player. But that should be troubling. This is not a faceoff between the number one and number five pick. No, this is supposed to be the best prospect in the NBA and a fate worse than being bad (according to the Treadmill theory) And yet, almost 1/3 of the time, teams would rather have ended up with the fifteenth pick. I do enjoy that the fifteenth pick has gone to two-time MVP Steve Nash, Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard, and dunk contest champion Brent Barry.

Yes, the top of the draft is full of all-time greats like Tim Duncan, Shaq, and LeBron. It's also full of disappointments like Andrea Bargnani, and Greg Oden (for injuries, obviously) And just outside the draft lottery is not devoid of stars. On the contrary, some of the best players in NBA history were picked in that spot. As we remind people every year, when this year's draft comes around with everyone clamoring about the top picks, it's just worth looking at history and giving that a second thought.

-Dre


*The 1990 draft was selected because that was when the draft lottery we know was introduced. Prior drafts to that had different odds for teams getting a top pick.

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