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2016 NBA Combine: Full Participant List, Comments, Reaction

Author: Bleacher Report
May 5, 2016 at 18:13

The NBA announced Thursday the 63 players who will take part in the 2016 NBA Draft Combine, which runs f-rom May 11-15 in Chicago.

The NBA announced Thursday the 63 players who will take part in the 2016 NBA Draft Combine, which runs f-rom May 11-15 in Chicago.

Bleacher Report's Jonathan Wasserman provided the entire list of participants:

 

2016 NBA Draft Combine Participants
Player School
Ron Baker Wichita State
Wade Baldwin Vanderbilt
Cat Barber North Carolina State
Malik Beasley Florida State
DeAndre Bembry St. Joseph's
Ben Bentil Providence
Jaron Blossomgame Clemson
Joel Bolomboy Weber State
Malcolm Brogdon Virginia
Jaylen Brown California
Robert Carter Maryland
Marquese Chriss Washington
Elgin Cook Oregon
Isaiah Cousins Oklahoma
Deyonta Davis Michigan State
Cheick Diallo Kansas
Kris Dunn Providence
Henry Ellenson Marquette
Perry Ellis Kansas
A.J. English Iona
Kay Felder Oakland
Dorian Finney-Smith Florida
Michael Gbinije Syracuse
Daniel Hamilton Connecticut
A.J. Hammons Purdue
Josh Hart Villanova
Nigel Hayes Wisconsin
Buddy Hield Oklahoma
Brandon Ingram Duke
Demetrius Jackson Notre Dame
Justin Jackson North Carolina
Brice Johnson North Carolina
Damian Jones Vanderbilt
Skal Labissiere Kentucky
Dedric Lawson Memphis
Jake Layman Maryland
Marcus Lee Kentucky
Caris LeVert Michigan
Thon Maker Orangeville Prep/Athlete Institute
Patrick McCaw UNLV
Isaiah Miles St. Joseph's
Jamal Murray Kentucky
Malik Newman Mississippi State
Georges Niang Iowa State
Chinanu Onuaku Louisville
Marcus Paige North Carolina
Gary Payton III Oregon State
Jakob Poeltl Utah
Taurean Prince Baylor
Zhou Qi Xinjiang (China)
Malachi Ric-hardson Syracuse
Wayne Selden Kansas
Pascal Siakam New Mexico State
Diamond Stone Maryland
Caleb Swanigan Purdue
Melo Trimble Maryland
Tyler Ulis Kentucky
Jarrod Uthoff Iowa
Denzel Valentine Michigan State
Isaiah Whitehead Seton Hall
Troy Williams Indiana
Kyle Wiltjer Gonzaga
Stephen Zimmerman UNLV

Source: Bleacher Report's Jonathan Wasserman

 

LSU Tigers forward Ben Simmons is the most notable absentee.

To a certain extent, the decision makes sense since Simmons was almost guaranteed to be a top pick whether he traveled to Chicago or not. However, the combine would've been a good chance for the talented freshman to respond to some of his skeptics regarding his poor shooting.

Simmons averaged 19.2 points a night for LSU last year, shooting 56 percent f-rom the field. Hoop-Math.com illustrated how much his offense came right under the basket, though:

 

Ben Simmons Shot Distribution
Total Shots % at Rim % of 2pt Jumpers % of 3pt Attempts
386 54.4% (210) 44.8% (173) 0.8% (3)

Source: Hoop-Math.com

 

In his most recent mock draft, Wasserman had Simmons going No. 1 overall, so it's not as if his lack of range is scaring teams off too much. Still, a nice showing at the combine might have solidified Simmons' standing as the best overall player available in this year's draft class.

Although one of the presumptive top picks won't be taking part in the combine, the event won't be lacking for intriguing players to watch.

Many eyes will be on Thon Maker. Maker announced in April he'd be skipping college altogether and entering the NBA, and ESPN.com'sChad Ford reported on April 14 the league ruled him eligible for this year's draft.
 

"He's going to have to show some things that we haven't seen yet, in workouts," an anonymous NBA executive said, per CSNNE.com's A. Sherrod Blakely. "Every draft has a player or two that you draft because he has upside, but he's a project. That's Thon Maker; a project with upside, the kind of upside that you're probably not going to really see or really be helped by for years down the road."

Maker can only do so much at the combine to improve his draft stock, but it will allow him to answer some of the bigger questions about his game.

Washington forward Marquese Chriss is in the same boat. He averaged 13.7 points and 5.4 rebounds a game, and CBSSports.com's Sam Vecenie made the case for why the Huskies freshman needs a good showing:

Also though, Chriss is going to have to show in workouts that he can take coaching instruction and apply it to his game. While the 18-year-old freshman has an incredibly high ceiling, he also has a low floor due to the fact that he's pretty much unplayable defensively right now in an NBA game. Chriss led the nation in fouls this season, and really struggles with the way he moves on the perimeter (more with his technique than his lateral quickness) and with the way he bites on pump fakes.

Wasserman argued Chriss could be anywhe-re f-rom a lottery pick (No. 8) to a mid-to-late first-rounder (No. 20), which is a relatively significant amount of volatility for a player at this stage of the draft process.

Of course, prospects such as Chriss and Maker aren't the only ones with a point to prove at the combine. More experienced college stars, namely Oklahoma's Buddy Hield, Michigan State's Denzel Valentine, Iowa State's Georges Niang and Virginia's Malcolm Brogdon can show the skills they displayed over the last few years will translate to the next level.

The stakes will be high in the Windy City as the upper echelon of this year's draft class showcase their talent in front of NBA personnel.

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