Rugged forward that has scoring chops inside the arc and operates well as a play-finisher in the halfcourt and in transition. Not a shooter at all. Will his lack of shooting be developed into something that can become league average? Defensively he is solid but a bit flawed. This combo leaves me with a lot of questions on the probability of Peat becoming a solid NBA role player. OFFENSIVE_EVALUATION: Peat is effective as a play-finisher in the halfcourt as well as in transition. Good cutter, can operate well as a roller to the rim to catch lobs or finish off the catch. Has some short area quickness that bodes well for him when posting up and catching with an empty side and a full head of steam. Also has a knack for crashing the offensive glass hard. Outside of the scoring around the rim, Peat isn't as effective. Sporting 22nd percentile mid range percentage, and a non-existent three point shot that is being re-worked to see if Peat can possibly shoot at a league average level in a few years. This leads to the idea of Peat ultimately being in the back half of the first round. I think he has some solid instincts as an offensive player to try to stick it out without a jumper, but real value would come if he's able to add some consistency as a jump shooter from three. DEFENSIVE_EVALUATION: An ok defender, not particularly excellent at any facet defensively. Like not great hands to get steals and blocks, not quick enough to really survive guarding on the perimeter. But again he has solid basketball instincts and is athletic enough to be a neutral defender guarding inside. Wouldn't put too much stock in the bad defensive rebounding statistics considering who he was playing next to. PROJECTION: Late First - Early Second (20-32) Best Fits: Philadelphia 76ers, San Antonio Spurs,