1. Los Angeles Clippers — Blake Griffin, F, OklahomaWhen Griffin gets the call from NBA Commissioner David Stern to charge the stage and hold up his Clippers jersey for the world to see, we must realize that the alteration of the worst franchise in the history of sport is beginning before our eyes.
It's no secret how dominate Griffin was at the collegiate level. In his sophomore season, the 6-foot-10, 250-pound forward led the nation in rebounding with an average of 14.3 board per game to go along with his 22.7 points per game. In 35 games, Griffin led the country in double-doubles with 30.
Griffin is the only prospect in this draft that would go top-three any other year. In this weak class, he is far-and-away the top prospect.
Here's an interesting bit of information I found about Griffin on NBA.com: Rebound total was the highest in a season by an NCAA Division I player since Indiana State's Larry Bird in 1978-79 (505) and rebounding average was the highest since Wake Forest's Tim Duncan in 1996-97 (14.7). Averaged 28.5 points and 15.0 rebounds, while shooting .780 over four NCAA Tournament games.
Pure destruction; in other words this isn't Michael Olowakandi. This is the pick that Clippers faithful has been waiting for.
One good thing to see is Griffin's quick acceptance of the L.A. way (of losing). When the balls dropped the Clips way on lottery night, Griffin didn't piss and moan to the media. He wasn't going to refuse to play for Los Angeles or ask for a trade.
Griffin knows he is a massive force that teams can build around.Believe it or not, the Clippers have some young talent to match with Griffin. Last year's first-round pick Eric Gordon showed some upside; small forward Al Thornton can score, but has some work to do; point guard Baron Davis is a proven leader and All-Star when healthy; centers Chris Kaman and Marcus Camby are both above-average players at their position.
If Griffin can come right in and become the No. 1 option for this team and take some pressure off of Davis, there isn't a doubt in my mind that the Clippers can clinch a playoff spot. Stueve's continued NBA Mock (I have Minnesota trading up to No.2 for the fifth and 18th overall):
2. Minnesota Timberwolves (trade w/ Memphis Grizzlies) — Ricky Rubio, G, Spain
3. Oklahoma City Thunder — Hasheem Thabeet, C, Connecticut
4. Sacramento Kings — Stephen Curry, G, Davidson
5. Memphis Grizzlies (trade w/ Minnesota Timberwolves) — Tyreke Evans, G, Memphis
6. Minnesota Timberwolves — James Harden, G, Arizona State
7. Golden State Warriors — Jrue Holiday, G, UCLA
8. New York Knicks — Brandon Jennings, G, Italy
9. Toronto Raptors — Jordan Hill, F, Arizona
10. Milwaukee Bucks — DeMar DeRozan, G, Southern California
11. New Jersey Nets — Terrence Williams, G/F, Louisville
12. Charlotte Bobcats — Gerald Henderson, G, Duke
13. Indiana Pacers — Earl Clark, F, Louisville
14. Phoenix Suns — Tyler Hansbrough, F, North Carolina
15. Detroit Pistons — Jonny Flynn, G, Syracuse
16. Chicago Bulls — DeJuan Blair, F, Pittsburgh
17. Philadelphia 76ers — James Johnson, F, Purdue
18. Memphis Grizzlies (trade w/ T-Wolves) — B.J. Mullins, C, Ohio State
19. Atlanta Hawks — Ty Lawson, G, North Carolina
20. Utah Jazz — Sam Young, F, Pittsburgh
21. New Orleans Hornets — Chase Budinger, G/F, Arizona
22. Portland Trailblazers — DeMarre Carroll, F, Missouri
23. Sacramento Kings — Austin Daye, F, Gonzaga
24. Dallas Mavericks, Eric Maynor, G, Virginia Commonwealth
25. Oklahoma City Thunder — Nick Calathes, G, Florida
26. Chicago Bulls — Toney Douglas, G, Florida State
27. Memphis Grizzlies — Derrick Brown, F, Xavier
28. Minnesota Timberwolves — Omri Casspi, F, Israel
29. New York Knicks (from Los Angeles Lakers) — Victor Claver, F, Spain
30. Cleveland Cavaliers — DeJuan Summers, F, Georgetown