NBA
NBA PM: Top International Prospects for 2016

Top International Draft Prospects for 2016
By the end of the summer, we typically have a pretty good idea of which players will be atop the following yearโs mock draft boards. There are bound to be some surprises (like DโAngelo Russell this year, for example) who pop up out of nowhere during the upcoming NCAA season, but the projections are often accurate.
This year, it certainly looks like LSUโs Ben Simmons, Kentuckyโs Skal Labissiere and Calโs Jaylen Brown are among the top prospects weโll watch throughout the college hoops season and perhaps well into March Madness. But as we learned this past year with players like Mario Hezonja and especially Kristaps Porzingis, teams are opening themselves back up to using high lottery picks on international players after a period of several years where that had not been the case.
Knowing this, itโs not a bad idea to familiarize ourselves with some of the top international prospects heading into this coming season, particularly the first three on the following list, who many have pegged as potential lottery picks for the 2016 NBA Draft should things continue on their current pace:
Dragan Bender, Croatia
For now, the most highly-touted international player of the upcoming draft class is Bender. He is a 7โ1 stretch-four with a set of talents that should make him one of the most exciting young players of the next 10 months. He doesnโt look like the kind of player whoโs going to bang on the block much, but heโs got a nice mix of back-to-the-basket moves and outside range. His three-point shot is surprisingly effective for someone his size, but he also can put the ball on the floor and thread the needle with efficient passing. Also, Bender is currently only 17 years old, so all these skills come in a package that still packs tons of potential. For now, he looks like a top-five pick, and thatโs definitely more of a floor than a ceiling.
Furkan Korkmaz, Turkey
A crafty 6โ6 scorer, Korkmaz is a player who, through a strong showing during the FIBA World Championships this past summer, more or less solidified himself as a player who could very well find himself in the conversation for the lottery next summer. The kid plays with swagger and can score from pretty much all over the floor. Heโs got this high release on his jumpshot that makes it incredibly challenging to defend, and he plays ball (on offense, at least) like heโs been watching a lot of tape of Stephen Curry. He wonโt be that good, obviously, but heโs an athlete with an exciting NBA future and certainly will be one of the best international kids in this next draft. Outside of Bender, heโs generated the most hype so far.
Zhou Qi, China
While Zhou is an absolute tower of a young man at 7โ2, heโs also rail thin at just a shade under 210 pounds. That obviously means heโll have to spend some time in a weight room once he makes his way to the states, but considering his skillset, that thin frame will seem minor in the big scheme of things. He has long arms, huge hands and a really nice touch around the basket. He might be a little soft, but if he ended up playing any power forward in the NBA heโd be able to float out a little bit and knock down some midrange-to-deep shots. Heโs quick for his size, but that comes with being so light. The talent and size are there, but he needs more of an NBA body. That, however, is something a team can work on after theyโve drafted him. Zhou looks like a first-rounder, and clearly one of the most talented international prospects in his class.
George De Paula, Brazil
If the name sounds familiar, it should. De Paula, who also has gone by George Lucas, was a kid who climbed up draft boards this past summer before ultimately bowing out of the process to play another year in Brazil. It mostly was his lack of experience that put his draft stock in question this past summer (De Paula had only his second-ever full-on English conversation at the Draft Combine this spring), but at 6โ6 and with a 7โ0 wingspan, De Paula is an absolutely phenomenal physical specimen. He has the some of the biggest hands ever measured at the combine (for a point guard or any other position), but heโs still very raw and certainly could use another year of seasoning. A strong year and pre-draft process could make solidify him as a first-round pick.
Timothe Luwawu, France
Luwawu, who also tested the waters in last summerโs NBA Draft, probably had a sense that he wasnโt going to be drafted where he hoped. Next summer, however, should be a different story, as the charismatic 6โ7 swingman is projected to be selected early in the second round. Heโs not as prolific a talent as the some of the more athletic and offensively gifted international players heading into the draft pool for 2016, but he uses his long arms and wide stride to serve as a potentially elite NBA defender. That should be his niche should he actually come over, but heโs good enough at everything else to be a solid, well-rounded pro player.
Aleksander Vezenkov, Bulgaria
While all international players are sort of sleepers in their own right, Vezenkov is a sleeper among international prospects. He had a great season last year in Greece, where he scored a ton of points and shot almost 50 percent from three-point range. Heโs a crafty lefty who can score a lot of different ways, and while heโs not necessarily the most athletic European prospect in the pool, heโs heady and creative enough to get things done all over the floor. His jumpshot, though, is where his bread is buttered.
Alpha Kaba, France
Because heโs 6โ10 with a 7โ5 wingspan, Kaba is the kind of prospect that NBA teams are interested in strictly because of his measurables. Heโs a rail-thin power forward that needs an American weight program in the worst way, but his height and length are exactly the sort of things that scouts love. He has the potential to be a solid defender with a wingspan like that, but there are questions about his drive and durability. He put his name into the 2015 Draft but ultimately withdrew. Heโs hoping that heโll have more success in 2016.
Of course, thereโs a possibility that other international prospects will break out over the course of this upcoming season, and thereโs also the possibility that some of the kids listed above could get hurt or fall off the map. Bender and Korkmaz look like the best bets for NBA success, but there are plenty of international players to keep an eye on throughout the next year.