TAP FOR 6 MONTHS OF PREMIUM FREE 💰
X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

Fantasy Basketball Rookies: Ranking the NBA Lottery Picks

The NBA season is just around the corner, which means the fantasy basketball draft season is happening right now.  Rotoballer is here to help with ranking players, sleepers,  busts, and draft strategy, with new content online every day.

Rookies are a dicey proposition in fantasy basketball.  Most NBA players don't get enough playing time their rookie seasons, or they have flaws in their young game that hamper their value.  However, there are a number of rookies every season who are useful and a very select few who are instant fantasy stars (think Chris Paul, Derrick Rose, and Damian Lillard).

When you're taking a chance on an unknown quantity like a rookie, it is that star upside at a cheap price that you are going for, and what almost all of the players who have become rookie stars have in common is that they were selected in the lottery portion of the NBA draft.  Today we will focus on the 14 lottery picks from 2015 NBA Draft and rank them for fantasy purposes in their rookie seasons.

Featured Promo: New Novig users get a $25 purchase match (50% discount up to $25) on your first Novig deposit, and 6 free months of RotoBaller's "Big-4" Premium Pass (NBA, NFL, MLB, NHL) which includes exclusive tools for Betting, Props, DFS and more! CLAIM IT NOW

 

Ranking the 2015 NBA Lottery Picks

Tier 1: Potential Stars

1. Karl-Anthony Towns (PF/C, MIN)

The number one overall pick was an analytics darling heading into the draft, then did enough in the eye test to blow away the non-analytically-minded Coach/GM with the number one overall pick, Flip Saunders (get well soon, coach).  What's so great about his game translates extremely well to category-based fantasy basketball.  He will be a strong source of rebounds and blocks, like you expect out of an elite big man.  But he'll also avoid the biggest weaknesses of most big men -- he's an excellent free throw shooter, a decent passer, and possibly even an occasional three point shooter.

The difference between him hitting, say, an .850 FT% and 2.0 assists per game versus Hassan Whiteside shooting a .500 FT% with 0.1 assists is massive.  Towns doesn't need to be as good at rebounding or at blocking shots as Whiteside to have top 50 value like Whiteside did last season.  He just needs to come fairly close and make up the value in other categories.  And it's been so far, so good in the preseason -- after three games, Whiteside's line sits at a nerd-pleasing .535 FG%, .909 FT%, 12.7 pts, 7.0 reb, 1.0 ast, 0.0 3pm, 1.7 stl, and 1.0 blk in 24.7 minutes.  The only red flags are an average of 2.0 turnovers and 3.3 personal fouls, which are areas where he'll need to improve in order to stay on the court, but not unexpected from a young player seeing his first action at the NBA level.

In future seasons, I expect him to turn into a first round caliber fantasy player.  This year, he doesn't need to be -- he just needs to be decent everywhere to make a good return on your investment for your fantasy team.

2. D'Angelo Russell (PG, LAL)

You want more security than a 19 year old PF?  Take a look at a list of the players who have won the NBA Rookie of the Year Award over the last decade.  Paul.  Rose.  Kyrie Irving.  Lillard.  Michael Carter-Williams.  A whole lot of point guards.  Meanwhile, most of the other winners of later have been wings, like Kevin Durant and Andrew Wiggins.  The only big man that's won ROY in the last 10 seasons has been Blake Griffin, who wasn't really a rookie in the purest sense.  An injury did prevent him from playing in the 2009-10 season, but he still got to work with an NBA team and learn the NBA game in that time.

It seems explosive guards and shooters are more likely to make an instant impact on offense with those skills than big men -- making an impact in the front court seems to have a steeper learning curve.  I obviously think Towns has the skills to buck that trend if he can stay healthy, but I won't blame you if you think a skilled point guard like D'Angelo Russell is a safer bet.

Besides, this isn't just any guard.  D'Angelo Russell has one of the best combinations of shooting and passing ability to come out of college in years.  He has the skillset to make an instant impact in fantasy leagues when it comes to scoring, assists, and three-pointers.  The biggest question will be playing time in a crowded backcourt that also features Kobe Bryant, Jordan Clarkson, Lou Williams, and Nick Young.  But Russell can play both at the point alongside Kobe and off-ball alongside Clarkson, and it seems pointless for a team going nowhere this year like the Lakers to bury a young star like Russell behind guys like Williams and Young.  Russell will earn plenty of minutes in those roles even if he isn't named starter out of the gate.

3. Stanley Johnson (SF, DET)

It's amazing how much Johnson's stock has risen in the past couple of weeks.  When I first started trying to rank these guys, I had him in the middle of the pack.  He was only picked 8th overall by Detroit, after all.  But I've had a double-shot of Koolaid on him over the course of the preseason, and even now I'm extremely tempted to move him up to 2nd ahead of Russell.  Johnson looks to be a huge part of the Pistons rotation, averaging the most minutes of any Piston in the preseason as coach Stan Van Gundy looks to see what he's capable of -- which appears to be quite a lot.  His stat line through four preseason games is .418 FG%, .842 FT% (on a very nice 4.8 FTA/game), 17.2 pts, 5.5 reb, 2.2 ast, 1.8 3pm, 1.0 stl, and 0.8 blk.  Those are some excellent all-around contributions.

Johnson is going to get starter's minutes and he's going to make contributions across the board in fantasy.  His offensive game is unpolished, which will likely limit his scoring and FG%, but he appears to be an otherwise nice all-around contributor.  Maybe I'm delusional and a fool (feel free to tell me in chat) for having Johnson this high.  Or maybe I'm delusional about the power of Russell's talent to overcome his situation, and a fool for not having a guy like Johnson ranked 2nd who looks tremendous so far in a great situation.

 

Tier 2: Big Chances, Flawed Fantasy Games

4. Emmanuel Mudiay (PG, DEN)

Emmanuel Mudiay actually has a better opportunity in Denver than D'Angelo Russell has in Los Angeles.  Mudiay will be sharing the point in Denver with Jameer Nelson, as opposed to Russell's situation with Clarkson and all those ball-hogging two-guards.  And while Russell has a much better offensive game, Mudiay has a certain set of skills in other areas that can make up some of the difference with Russell.   Mudiay's problem is that, while athletic, his offensive game is quite raw.  The athleticism will allow him to grab more rebounds, steals, and blocks than Russell.  However, his rawness will lead to terrible numbers in both FG% and FT%, with an atrocious number of turnovers.

I think the playing time will give Mudiay a chance to have some raw situational value in some head-to-head leagues, but I wouldn't bother in roto -- I don't want inefficiency sinking me in three categories.  That's the problem with inefficiency -- even if you're lucky enough to get big minutes, that just makes a guy's terrible percentages and turnover rates hurt you even more.  Mudiay's absolute upside for this year looks something like the rookie season that Michael Carter-Williams had for the 76ers in 2013-14, with high counting stats killed by horrible efficiency stats.

5. Jahlil Okafor (PF/C, PHI)

Okafor, it was popular to point out going into the NBA draft, has one of the most polished post games to come out of the draft in years.  That will allow him to do some nice things scoring the ball in the pro game.  He's as good a bet as any to lead this year's rookie class in points per game, and he'll have a nice FG%.

Unfortunately, there are holes in Okafor's game.  The biggest one -- the achilles heel of many a big man -- is his free throw shooting.  He's not very good at the charity stripe, and that's going to hurt you unless you're punting the stat in a head-to-head league.  The other problems will come in rebounds and blocks, which are important stats to be getting in vast quantities out of a big man who's going to be non-factor in assists and threes and a negative in FT%.  He wasn't as great as you'd expect in those areas in college, and playing alongside a dominant under-the-basket player in Nerlens Noel is going to further hurt Okafor.  When they share the court, Noel is going to essentially "steal" rebounds from Okafor and occupy the defensive spot under the basket where it's easier to generate blocks.

I think Okafor is going to be empty scoring and FG% this year, and he only sits ahead of several other higher potential guys because he's guaranteed to get playing time.

 

Tier 3: Upside Skills, Uneven Playing Time

6. Kristaps Porzingis (PF/C, NYK)

7. Myles Turner (PF/C, IND)

I'm going to start speeding things up as we get into guys who are less and less likely to have fantasy relevance in standard leagues.  Both Kristaps Porzingis and Myles Turner I can cover at the same time.  The two forwards have the upside to be excellent combos of blocks and threes, with nice percentages.  That's what you're looking for in the modern rotisserie basketball big man.  However, both are very raw, young players, and both are currently nursing injuries that have limited their chances to shine in the preseason, so they're unlikely to see much playing time out of the gate in the regular season.  I like both of these guys as watch list / ready to add guys in the event that they find their way into serious playing time, but that's unlikely at this point and it's not worth burning a draft pick or an early roster spot.

8. Justise Winslow (SF, MIA)

Winslow has been struggling in the preseason, and isn't guaranteed minutes in Miami yet.  However, he's capable of making some nice contributions in the defensive stats and in threes if he can get used to the game and work his way into the rotation.  He's a just a gamer, too -- I want to believe in him.

 

Tier 4: Category Specialists

9. Willie Cauley-Stein (C, SAC)

Cauley-Stein should be a reasonable source of steals, blocks, and boards, but is an absolutely black hole on offense.  He's best reserved as a specialist to add in H2H leagues for a game or two when you need defensive stats in a matchup.

10. Frank Kaminsky (C, CHA)

Kaminsky could be a decent source of threes as a C, which is useful if you're streaming in a league that forces you to play two centers.  He'd need to add value in the defensive stats to be taken more seriously.

11. Mario Hezonja (SG, ORL)

12. Devin Booker (SG, PHO)

Mario Hezonja and Devin Booker both have long-term potential to develop into good NBA wings, but they are both going to be three point shooters without adding much else to start their careers.  There are plenty of guys like that always available on waivers in most leagues.

 

Tier 5: Completely Buried On The Depth Chart

13. Cameron Payne (PG, OKC)

Has some promise as a shooter at the point, but well behind minutes-devouring all-world starter Russell Westbrook and solid veteran backup PG DJ Augustin.

14. Trey Lyles (PF, UTA)

A raw young forward on a team pretty well set at power forward with Derrick Favors and Trevor Booker.

 

NBA & Fantasy Basketball Chat Room

[iflychat_embed id="c-11" hide_user_list="yes" hide_popup_chat="no" height="400px"]

POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Michael Penix Jr.

Hopes to be Ready for Week 1
Isaac Paredes

Not a Lock for Opening Day Lineup?
Dalton Kincaid

Doesn't Need Offseason Surgery
Josh Allen

Undergoes Foot Surgery
Josh Allen

on Crutches, Wearing Walking Boot
Corbin Carroll

a Top Fantasy Outfielder After Joining 30-30 Club
Jonah Tong

Won't Pitch in the World Baseball Classic
CFB

Michigan RB Bryson Kuzdzal Withdrawing from Transfer Portal
James Reimer

Stops Avalanche Wednesday Night
Tim Stützle

Tim Stutzle Collects Two Points Against Avalanche
Ondrej Palat

Enjoys Multi-Point Debut With Islanders
Zach Werenski

Has Fifth Multi-Point Outing of the Month
Travis Konecny

Questionable for Thursday
Rasmus Ristolainen

Doesn't Finish Wednesday's Loss
Blake Coleman

Out Until Olympic Break
Aaron Gordon

Out Thursday
Isaiah Hartenstein

Available Thursday
Russell Westbrook

Questionable to Play Thursday
Zach LaVine

Returns From Two-Game Absence
Paul George

Expected to Play Against Kings
Joel Embiid

Probable Thursday
Steven Adams

Undergoes Season-Ending Ankle Surgery
Egor Demin

Won't Play Versus Denver
Cam Thomas

Resting on Thursday Night
Aaron Judge

Appears to be Past his Elbow Issues
Bo Nix

Expected to Resume Training in 4-6 Weeks
Dan Vladar

Returns to Flyers Crease
Denton Mateychuk

Back in Action Wednesday
Stephen Halliday

Unavailable Versus Avalanche
Ross Colton

Won't Play Wednesday
Devon Toews

Still Out Wednesday
Simon Holmstrom

Expected to Return Wednesday
Ryan Pulock

a Game-Time Call Wednesday
Michael Penix Jr.

Thinks he'll be Ready by April
Evan Carter

Establishes a Goal to Steal 30 Bases
Edouard Julien

Traded to the Rockies
Cleveland Browns

Browns Hiring Todd Monken as Next Head Coach
Jack St. Ivany

to Miss Up to Eight Weeks After Surgery
Cody Glass

Exits Early Tuesday Night
Anton Lundell

Expected to Be Available Thursday
Jordan Kyrou

Jake Neighbours Knocked Out of the Lineup Tuesday
Elias Lindholm

Hurt in Tuesday's Win
Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen

Exits With Injury Tuesday
Ondrej Palat

Devils Send Ondrej Palat to the Islanders
Collin Murray-Boyles

Listed as Questionable for Wednesday's Game
Jock Landale

Available for Wednesday's Tilt
Kel'el Ware

in Danger of Missing Another Game
Sahith Theegala

Off to Much Better 2026 Start
Davion Mitchell

Iffy for Wednesday
Gary Woodland

an Intriguing Option at Torrey Pines This Week
Norman Powell

Questionable Wednesday
Tyler Herro

Remains Out Wednesday
CJ Abrams

Giants Offer "Aggressive Pitch" for CJ Abrams
Andrew Putnam

Hopes to Keep Momentum Rolling This Week
Nikola Jokić

Nikola Jokic to Be Re-Evaluated in One Week
Matthieu Pavon

Seeks to Return to 2024 Form at Torrey Pines
Luke List

Still Looking For Birdies at Torrey Pines
Jake Knapp

Faces Stiff Challenge at Farmers Insurance Open
Rasmus Hojgaard

Needs to Play Better at Torrey Pines
Christiaan Bezuidenhout

Could Struggle at Farmers Insurance Open
J.J. Spaun

A Steady Option At Farmers Insurance Open
Andrew Novak

Looking For More Success At Torrey Pines
Denny McCarthy

A Wild Card At Farmers Insurance Open
Max Homa

Looks To Keep Resurgence Going At Torrey Pines
Joe Highsmith

Struggling Heading Into Torrey Pines
Wyndham Clark

Looks To Carry Momentum Into Farmers Insurance Open
Tony Finau

Aims To Turn Things Around At Torrey Pines
Darius Garland

Won't Be Available Wednesday
Akshay Bhatia

Looks to Bounce Back at Torrey Pines
Franz Wagner

Won't Play Wednesday
Draymond Green

Expected to Return Wednesday
Kawhi Leonard

Available Against Jazz
Jordan Goodwin

Starts Against Nets
Paul Goldschmidt

Yankees Expressing Interest in Re-Signing Paul Goldschmidt
Bo Bichette

Won't Play in World Baseball Classic
NFL

Bill Belichick Won't be First-Ballot Hall of Famer
Carlos Correa

Won't Play for Puerto Rico in World Baseball Classic
Si Woo Kim

Looks to Continue Incredible Run at Torrey Pines
Jason Day

has a Good Chance to Keep Momentum This Weekend
Keegan Bradley

has Good Course History at Torrey Pines
Billy Horschel

Isn't a Great DFS Option at Torrey Pines
Aaron Rodgers

Mike McCarthy Says he Wants Aaron Rodgers to Return
Will Zalatoris

Has a Shot to Challenge at the Farmers Insurance Open
Drake Maye

Expected to be Fine for Super Bowl
Tennessee Titans

Titans Set to Hire Brian Daboll as New Offensive Coordinator
Buffalo Bills

Bills Promote Joe Brady to Head Coach
CFB

Quarterback Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi Signs with Michigan
CFB

Darian Mensah Reaches Settlement with Duke, Expected to Land at Miami
Eugenio Suárez

Eugenio Suarez Not Drawing Interest on Open Market?
Shedeur Sanders

Named as Pro Bowl Replacement
Framber Valdez

Among Many High-End Pitchers on Free-Agent Market
Jose Altuve

Won't Participate in World Baseball Classic
Harrison Bader

Agrees With Giants on Two-Year Deal
Paddy Pimblett

Drops Decision
Justin Gaethje

Becomes the New Interim-Lightweight Champion
Song Yadong

Suffers Unanimous Decision Loss
MMA

Sean O'Malley Gets Back In The Win Column
Waldo Cortes-Acosta

Extends His Win Streak
Derrick Lewis

Suffers Second-Round TKO Loss
Los Angeles Chargers

Chargers Officially Hire Mike McDaniel as Offensive Coordinator
Nathan Eovaldi

Doesn't Expect Any Limitations in Spring Training
Jaxon Smith-Njigba

Dominates in NFC Championship Game Win
Matthew Stafford

Plans to Return in 2026
CFB

Arthur Smith to Become Ohio State's Offensive Coordinator
Bo Nix

Sidelined for 12 Weeks With Broken Ankle
Jose Altuve

to Mainly Play Second Base
Yu Darvish

Considering Retirement
Pittsburgh Steelers

Steelers Finalizing Deal to Make Mike McCarthy Their Head Coach
José Ramírez

Jose Ramirez Signs Seven-Year Extension With Guardians
Gunnar Henderson

is Fully Healthy Heading into Spring Training
Tyreek Hill

Dolphins Expected to Release Tyreek Hill

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP