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Best team fits for players in NBA Draft
Robert Hanashiro-USA TODAY Sports

Best team fits for players in NBA Draft

Yardbarker NBA draft analyst Brett Koremenos offers the best player-team fits in the June 20 draft. (Vanderbilt's Darius Garland and the Lakers, anyone?)

 
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Vanderbilt's Darius Garland and Los Angeles Lakers

Vanderbilt's Darius Garland and Los Angeles Lakers
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During the 2018-19 season, the Lakers ranked 29th in three-point field goal percentage. Garland may be one of the best shooters in the draft. Should major contributors Lonzo Ball, Kyle Kouzma and, of course, LeBron James be on the L.A. roster opening night, Garland will be in a perfect spot. There will be no pressure for him to start right away, a nice transition for a player who missed most of his only season at Vanderbilt because of a knee injury. If he were to land with the Lakers, Garland would play with a ball-dominant playmaker -- either James or Ball -- allowing Garland to do what he does best: shoot.

 
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Texas' Jaxson Hayes and Washington Wizards

Texas' Jaxson Hayes and Washington Wizards
Stephen Spillman-USA TODAY Sports

When the aging Marcin Gortat was traded last year, Wizards franchise point guard John Wall lost arguably the best pick-and-roll partner he has had in D.C. Enter Hayes. Nothing would help a rookie center find his NBA footing like one of the league’s best passers. As for Wall, he’d find new life having a young, lob-catching big man to help him torture defenses.

 
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Gonzaga's Rui Hachimura and Miami Heat

Gonzaga's Rui Hachimura and Miami Heat
Robert Hanashiro-USA TODAY Sports

Ever since the Big Three left town, Miami has become the basketball version of the Island of Misfit Toys. From Josh Richardson to Justise Winslow to James Johnson, the Heat has taken players without a clearly defined position and found a way to make them work. For a hard-working but unrefined forward such as the 6-foot-8 Hachimura, Miami would be a godsend. Somehow Miami’s culture would likely find a way to ensure Hachimura becomes a valuable NBA contributor.

 
4 of 10

Kentucky's Keldon Johnson and Detroit Pistons

Kentucky's Keldon Johnson and Detroit Pistons
Jay Biggerstaff-USA TODAY Sports

Detroit’s recent mediocrity mostly can be linked to sub-par wing play. Johnson’s game isn’t super-sexy, but he’s an energetic defender with a jump shot that should require respect from NBA three-point territory. 

 
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Tennessee's Grant Williams and Utah Jazz

Tennessee's Grant Williams and Utah Jazz
Christopher Hanewinckel-USA TODAY Sports

With Donovan Mitchell emerging as the offensive star and Rudy Golbert anchoring the defense, the Jazz isn't desperate for star power. Instead, the team needs role players capable of executing their savvy brand of basketball and hitting open shots. That sounds exactly like what the rugged but instinctive Williams should bring. Although the shooting isn’t quite a sure thing (yet), the Tennessee forward would carve out a rotation spot quickly in Utah.

 
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Arizona State's Lu Dort and Portland Trail Blazers

Arizona State's Lu Dort and Portland Trail Blazers
Brett Rojo-USA TODAY Sports

Perhaps the biggest flaw in Dort’s game is the decisions he makes with the ball in his hands. When you play for the Portland Trail Blazers, CJ McCollum and Damian Lillard handle those situations. With the Blazers, Dort could emerge as the perfect defensive yin to Lillard and McCollum’s offensive yang. The strong and athletic guard could handle tough backcourt assignments, allowing Portland's bucket-getting duo to focus solely on tormenting defenses.

 
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Washington's Matisse Thybulle and San Antonio Spurs

Washington's Matisse Thybulle and San Antonio Spurs
Stephen R. Sylvanie-USA TODAY Sports

Over the past two decades, the Spurs have developed a reputation. San Antonio will take a raw wing player and, almost under the cover of night, develop him into a crucial cog in their playoff machine. Thybulle has made a name for himself as an athletic, disruptive 6-foot-5 defender oozing potential but lacking refinement. He spent time at Washington playing in a 2-3 zone and doesn’t have much in the way of offensive skills. If any team could unlock Thybulle’s potential and turn him into a two-way force, it’s the Spurs.

 
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Georgia's Nic Claxton and Brooklyn Nets

Georgia's Nic Claxton and Brooklyn Nets
Christopher Hanewinckel-USA TODAY Sports

After making an appearance in this year’s playoffs, the Nets finally got a chance to show off their innovative offense. It was orchestrated by young players who benefited from the great developmental process in Brooklyn. If you squint hard enough, Claxton has the makings of a rangy, perimeter-savvy center with a respectable outside shot. But like unfinished sculpture, Claxton needs a team to chip away the rough edges. For a Nets offense that likes to have all its players capable of handling themselves behind the three-point line, Claxton would be a perfect addition

 
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Arkansas' Daniel Gafford and Golden State Warriors

Arkansas' Daniel Gafford and Golden State Warriors
Nelson Chenault-USA TODAY Sports

When JaVale McGee signed with the Lakers last summer, the Warriors lost an important skill set. McGee had his flaws, but his ability to threaten opponents by diving to the rim en route to a lob combined perfectly with Golden State’s trio of all-world shooters. Gafford would need some time to develop, but he could eventually replicate some of what McGee offered.

 
10 of 10

Arizona State's Zylan Cheatham and Milwaukee Bucks

Arizona State's Zylan Cheatham and Milwaukee Bucks
Brett Rojo-USA TODAY Sports

The Bucks emerged as on the league’s best teams thanks to an efficient offense, a rising superstar and a supporting cast filled with versatile contributors. Unfortunately for Milwaukee, some of those key players are free agents and could depart. Cheatham would be a great fit. The 6-foot-8 Arizona State senior is an elite athlete, underrated passer and multi-position defender with an overhauled jump shot that will soon make him a threat from NBA three. Cheatham is also perhaps one of just a few players in the draft capable of contributing right away -- that's a great value to a championship contender.

Brett Koremenos is a writer, trainer and strength coach who has worked with and written about athletes from high school to the professional level for over a decade.

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