In any case, let me start off with the 1985 Draft, how picks could have changed in hindsight, and possible repercussions of the moves.
| Pick | Team | Actual Draftee | Notes |
| 1 | New York | Patrick Ewing | Dream Team, 84 Olympic Team |
| 2 | Indiana | Wayman Tisdale | 84 Olympic Team |
| 3 | LA Clippers | Benoit Benjamin | |
| 4 | Seattle | Xavier McDaniel | All Star |
| 5 | Atlanta | Jon Koncak | 84 Olympic Team |
| 6 | Sacramento | Joe Kleine | 84 Olympic Team |
| 7 | Golden State | Chris Mullin | Dream Team, 84 Olympic Team |
| 8 | Dallas | Detlef Schrempf | All Star |
| 9 | Cleveland | Charles Oakley | All Star |
| 10 | Phoenix | Ed Pinckney | |
| 11 | Chicago | Keith Lee | |
| 12 | Washington | Kenny Green | |
| 13 | Utah | Karl Malone | Dream Team |
| 14 | San Antonio | Alfrederick Hughes | |
| 15 | Denver | Blair Rasmussen | |
| 16 | Dallas | Bill Wennington | |
| 17 | Dallas | Uwe Blab | |
| 18 | Detroit | Joe Dumars | All Star |
| 19 | Houston | Steve Harris | |
| 20 | Boston | Sam Vincent | |
| 21 | Philadelphia | Terry Catledge | |
| 22 | Milwaukee | Jerry Reynolds | |
| 23 | LA Lakers | AC Green | All Star |
| 24 | Portland | Terry Porter | All Star |
| Other Picks: | |||
| 31 | Washington | Manute Bol | |
| 35 | San Antonio | Tyrone Corbin | |
| 45 | Cleveland | John Williams | |
| 47 | New York | Gerald Wilkins | |
| 54 | Houston | Sam Mitchell | |
| 66 | Sacramento | Michael Adams | All Star |
| 69 | Chicago | Mike Brown | |
| 84 | Atlanta | John Battle | |
| 87 | Detroit | Spud Webb | |
| 160 | Milwaukee | Mario Elie | |
DRAFT SUMMARY:
The draft featured 10 All Stars (1-Ewing, 4-McDaniel, 7-Mullin, 8-Schrempf, 9-Oakley, 13-Malone, 18-Dumars, 23-AC Green, 24-Porter, 66-Adams), of which there are 4 likely HOFers (Ewing, Mullin, Malone, Dumars). This draft also had a number of non first rounders who had productive careers at close to All Star levels such as Williams, Wilkins, and Webb. They also had a couple of players who had late but productive careers such as Mitchell (first season was 1989-90) and Mario Elie (1990-91).
MICHAEL JORDAN OLYMPIC TEAMS:
This draft also included the bulk of the Jordan-led 1984 Olympic Team frontline in centers Ewing, Koncak, and Kleine and power forward Tisdale (Sam Perkins was drafted in 1984). Aside from the big men, they also included the 84 squad's top shooter in Mullin. Ewing and Mullin teamed up again in 1992 as part of another Jordan lead Olympic Team, this time the Dream Team. They were joined by another 85 draftee in Karl Malone.
BIG MAN BUSTS:
This was still the era of the NBA big man, as evidenced by the teams gambling on drafting big men that ended up as busts. Start off with 3rd pick Benoit Benjamin who had a productive career statistics wise but was a bust due to lack of intensity and effort throughout has career. Next came the back to back selections of Jon Koncak (5th) and Joe Kleine. Given that they were members of the 84 Olympic Team, teams may have had enough reason to draft them that high, but it still needs to be mentioned that 8 future All Stars were drafted after them. They did have long careers as back-ups. Later in the first round, Dallas picked another pair of white 7 foot draft busts back to back. These were Bill Wennington (16) and Uwe Blab. Wennington at least had a long career, including a couple of seasons as a quality back-up but Blab was a total waste. Four (4) future All Stars were drafted after them, as well as other potentially more productive big men in shot blocking specialist Manute Bol and solid starter and borderline All Star John Williams who were both taken in the second round.
ALL AROUND BUSTS:
Aside from the 7 footers, which were an understandable fad at that time, there were also some selections that were simply awful decisions. Cleveland for example initially seemed to have made a great pick at 9th taking Charles Oakley, but then shot themselves in the foot by trading Oakley for 11th pick Keith Lee. Oakley played 1282 games over 19 seasons, finishing with career averages of 9.7 ppg and 9.5 rpg. Lee meanwhile played 182 games over 3 seasons averaging 6.1 ppg and 4.7 rpg.
Another notable bust was Kenny Green, who was drafted 12th overall by the Washington Bullets, or one slot ahead of Karl Malone. Green never even played the equivalent of a full season, appearing in 60 games over 3 years and scoring a total of 265 points.
At the 14th slot, or one after Malone, the San Antonio Spurs picked Alfrederick Hughes, who did play more games than Green at 68, but did so in only one season. Given that no team would have reasonably expected Michael Adams to be a future All Star at that time, they still passed up three future All Stars drafted in the first round after Hughes in Dumars, AC Green, and Porter. Several other choices would have yielded part time starters in C Blair Rasmussen or F Terry Catledge.
WHAT IFS:
The ultimate what-if for this entire draft would have been if any of the teams from 2-12 would have drafted Karl Malone. A more realistic scenario would have players moving within 5 to 10 slots. For example, even though Michael Adams ended up as a future All Star, no team would have considered taking him in the first round.
Chicago ends up with Karl Malone instead of Oakley: Oakley was a productive sidekick to Jordan for his first three years in Chicago, but Malone would have provided the same toughness, similar rebounding, and much better scoring. Imagine a two-man game featuring Malone and MJ.
Dallas uses 16th or 17th pick on John Williams: Williams was a potential first round pick who slipped to the second round because his eligibility was in question as a result of the point shaving scandal at Tulane University where he played. He actually had to sit out the 1985-86 season until being cleared to play the next year. Selecting Williams, even if he plays only in 1986-87, would have strengthened a Mavericks frontline which featured James Donaldson, Roy Tarpley, and Sam Perkins at the power slots and Mark Aguirre and Detlef Schrempf at the small forward post. He played 13 seasons, finishing with career averages of 29.7 mpg, 11.0 ppg, 6.8 rpg, and 1.6 bpg in 887 career games.
Houston drafts Terry Porter at 19: Houston had the Twin Towers at that time and were looking for outside shooting to open up the inside. They did not expect that John Lucas would fall to drugs once again and leave them without a point guard. Porter would have fit in well in Houston's defensive scheme, and developed into a good shooter as his career progressed. The Rockets made the finals that season with no contribution from Harris at the shooting guard spot, but after losing Lucas late in the season, they had to make do with a point guard rotation of Robert Reid and Allen Leavell. Having had Porter as a back-up point guard might have given the Rockets a better chance against the Celtics in 1986. Porter played 79 games averaging 15.4 mpg, 7.1 ppg, and 2.5 apg as a rookie back-up guard. Aside from being much better than Harris' 8.5 mpg and 4.5 ppg in 57 games as a bench warmer, Porter could have helped in the Rockets' point guard crisis not only late in the season but through the next season.
