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Rutger's star is controversial for the controversial view in the most recent NBA history

Duke Blue Devil Cooper Flagg could be the consensus number one selection in this upcoming NBA design from 2025 and perhaps the most surely view that the league has seen since Lebron James in 2003, but he is not the player who is most enthusiastic about the combine harvester. Instead, this title belongs to the former Rutgers Scarlet Knight Airious “Ace” Bailey.

Bailey came from the High School and was the country's second best talent, directly behind Flagg. He also disappointed in his first season at Rutgers. Despite the disappointing team record of the Scarlet Knights, which was only 15-17, ACE produced like the top perspective he was. He put on 17.6 points, 7.2 rebounds, 1.3 assists, 1.3 blocks and 1.0 steals per game. He did this when he presented his elite sportiness, his rangy size and his patented hard shot finding.

Although he mainly fulfilled expectations at Rutgers when he was 18, Bailey was slightly the most tested view in his class. It is still expected to go to the top 5, but some design analysts and experts have rated him as if he were a guaranteed bust, a player to avoid them at all costs.

There are real concerns about his game, such as his shaky grip, his limited play area and a questionable selection of fires as scarlet red knights. The way it has so far dissected during this design cycle was incredibly unfair. Everything he did was dismantled and slandered.

It started with its measurements. No, Ace Bailey was not 6'10 “barefoot. However, he was recorded as 6,7.5”. In the past, the NBA players were almost always measured in shoes, which added about two centimeters of the height. That would bring Bailey with 6'9.5 “… or practically 6'10”. The amount of counter -reactions that came when its height was announced would indicate that he entered 6,5 or less. He may not be an official 6'10 “, but he only measured a quarter of inches shorter as Cooper Flag, and Nary had a soul a problem with flag called 6'10”.

His quotes, which had previously come from the combine harvester, were even more controversial. When asked how he was able to make Rutgers so many hard appearance, he explained that he was doing shots that could be considered bad during training. This was bumped into a turmoil from his critics, who described it as evidence that he will never be a team player in the NBA. He also had a soundbite in which he was asked to create a scouting report about himself and strengthen his two most important strengths and his greatest weakness. In joke he replied:

“I have no weaknesses and I have more than two strengths, big dog.”

Although it was an obvious joke, his most decisive critics were still running with the quote. The NBA design is still over a month, but Bailey has already been set up as the largest outsider in the class, although it is number two that comes out of the high school. All incoming noises still have to shake his confidence. Hopefully this will continue when he uses his NBA career.

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