Bulls draft talk: The force is with Obi, but would he be a good fit?

Dayton power forward Obi Toppin is arguably the most dynamic scorer in the upcoming draft, but the Bulls have a logjam at the position. Will they take the best available player or will they draft for need?

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Dayton’s Obi Toppin is the best power forward in the NBA Draft, but would he fit in with the Bulls?

Dayton’s Obi Toppin is the best power forward in the NBA Draft, but would he fit in with the Bulls?

Tony Tribble/AP

The “what if’’ game is alive and well around the Advocate Center these days.

That’s what the NBA Draft does to an organization.

Heck, the “what if’’ game is likely the biggest — and only — game the Bulls will compete in before next December.

So, what if the lottery balls are kind to the Bulls, dropping them in that range of No. 3 to 5, rather than the all-too-familiar No. 7 spot they are slotted in?

That basically puts them in Obi Toppin territory.

Do they take the best available player on the board in the Dayton power forward or do they draft for need as in a small forward or point guard?

If there’s a position the Bulls seem to have some depth in, it is that four spot.

There’s starter Lauri Markkanen, whom the new-look front office is hell-bent on rebooting to the player he was in February 2019, and there’s Wendell Carter Jr., who has been moonlighting as the starting center but badly wants to return to the power forward spot that he played his entire pre-Bulls basketball life.

The addition of Toppin would add even more confusion, but it would also give the roster something it lacks in the frontcourt: an athletic, above-the-rim scorer who’s 6-9.

Not only does Toppin make frequent flights to Zach LaVine altitude, but he can shoot from long range and could be the most accomplished scorer in the draft not named Anthony Edwards.

But is he a fit?

That’s what executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas and general manager Marc Eversley have to decide.

In what many consider a down draft — shhhh, don’t tell Karnisovas — the power forward spot might have some of the more intriguing players. The line, however, begins with Toppin.

1. Obi Toppin — Dayton: Toppin can score and run the floor with the best of them, leaving little argument about who the top power forward in the draft is.

2. Onyeka Okongwu — USC: At 6-9, Okongwu falls under the tweener description, getting looks as a center by some teams because of his ridiculous shot-blocking ability and bounce around the rim, but the Bulls have gone that route with Carter already.

Okongwu would be the perfect fit for a team that has scorers but lacks a defensive presence at the rim, and that’s why Atlanta and Detroit will have him on their radar. He could develop into an elite defender and an underrated scorer but too closely resembles Carter for the Bulls to go that direction with that high of a pick.

3. Precious Achiuwa — Memphis: Like Okongwu, Achiuwa is a 6-9 rim protector who doubles as a center in some systems. The difference is he’s just a small step down from the USC product and would be a bit more of a project.

4. Patrick Williams — Florida State: Here’s where the position takes a dip, with Williams being a borderline lottery pick. He is a really good defender, versatile enough to guard fours and fives and even certain threes, but doesn’t have the paint presence of Okongwu and Achiuwa.

What makes him attractive to scouts is his athleticism off the pick-and-roll on the offensive end, as well as his team-first attitude.

5. Jaden McDaniels — Washington: Listed at 6-10, McDaniels screams power forward. Here’s where it gets tricky, however. He’s a skinny 6-10, and there are serious questions about his toughness. He can shoot from long range, which makes him seem like more of a stretch four, and does have the agility on the defensive end to switch onto a guard.

The interview process will be key for McDaniels because he has a lot of questions to answer, starting with his inconsistency from game to game.

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