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Yi Jianlian, seen here in 2006 and
regarded as China's next breakout star after Yao Ming, leads global
prospects in Thursday's National Basketball Association Draft with US
college star Greg Oden the likely first selection.(Photo source: China
Daily)
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BEIJING,
June 27 -- Yi Jianlian, seen as China's next breakout star after Yao Ming, leads
global prospects in Thursday's National Basketball Association Draft with US
college star Greg Oden the likely first selection.
Yi, a 7-foot forward with quickness and a nice
outside shooting touch, is likely to be taken among the top 10 selections,
possibly in the top five, after the 19-year-old star led the Guandong Southern
Tigers to three Chinese titles.
Yi averaged 24.9 points and 11.5 rebounds in 30
minutes a game last season and worked out in private sessions with several
teams, impressing Philadelphia 76ers president and general manager Billy King in
many areas.
"Shooting the three-pointer, handling the basketball,
seeing him run," King said. "We got to see him do the same testing we do with
prospects, like shuttle runs and sprints."
Oden, who led Ohio State to the US college finals as
a freshman, is expected to be selected first overall by Portland with playmaker
Kevin Durant from Texas the likely second selection by Seattle.
Atlanta chooses next followed in order by Memphis,
Boston, Milwaukee, Minnesota, Charlotte, Chicago and Sacramento.
Joakim Noah, the son of French tennis legend Yannick
Noah, is joined by his two-time US champion Florida teammates Al Horford and
Corey Brewer and Ohio State's Mike Conley among other US prospects.
But with Germany's Dirk Nowitzki winning NBA Most
Valuable Player honors and France's Tony Parker taking NBA Finals MVP honors -
both firsts by a European - and San Antonio's champions having a record six
non-US players, global talent ranks high.
"For years, a lot of the NBA execs might have thought
the American player was better. But that's not the case anymore," Nets general
manager Ed Stefanski said. "Some foreign-born players are excellent. They're
here to stay."
Italy's Andrea Bargnani was the top pick in last
year's draft and Australian Andrew Bogut went number one in 2005.
Yao went number one to Houston in 2002 and has had a
major impact in raising NBA interest in China. Almost one in five NBA players
last season were from beyond US borders.
"If the international ranks didn't exist it would be
impossible to duplicate the quality of play we have today," Memphis Grizzlies
general manager Chris Wallace said.
Global media will reach record levels at this year's
draft, which will be seen in 115 nations and heard in 18 languages.
"This is the first time the NBA Draft is being
broadcast live in the Guangdong area," said Lu Xiaofeng of Guangdong TV Sports.
"Our country is proud of the potential draftees from China and hope they get
selected early."
Noah will receive special attention.
"This is going to be huge in France because Noah is
expected to be picked higher than previous French NBA stars Tony Parker and
Boris Diaw," said Canal Plus reporter Samyr Hamoudi.
"Since Noah's father is loved in France and they are
considered a family sports dynasty, people in France are very excited to follow
Joakim in the NBA."
Other global hopefuls seen as strong prospects
include 22-year-old Brazilian forward Tiago Splitter, Spanish guard Rudy
Fernandez, Italy's Marco Belinelli, Finland's Petteri Koponen and Ukraine center
Kyrylo Fesenko.
"Talent for your team can be found anywhere," Toronto
Raptors vice president Maurizio Gherardini said. "You can't be surprised to find
talent anywhere in the world."
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)