SALT LAKE CITY — There are others rated ahead of him on their wish list.
But — especially if their favorites, including Georgetown power forward Greg Monroe, already are gone — the notion of the Jazz taking Patrick Patterson at No. 9 overall in the June 24 NBA Draft might not be that much of a stretch.
And it certainly would fit the mold.
Patterson extended his college career at the University of Kentucky by one season, much to his benefit.
He made concise but articulate answers go a long way at the recent NBA pre-draft camp in Chicago.
And he's stretched an arguably undersized body — 6-foot-8 without shoes, 6-9 with, 240 pounds and a wingspan of just 7-1, which is 1 inch less than that of Monroe and nearly 6 inches less than the amazing 7-7 of Marshall's Hassan Whiteside — into one capable of competing with those taller and longer.
"I have no worries at all with my size going into the league, going into the next level," said Patterson, one of six draft prospects who worked out for the Jazz on Wednesday.
"If you can play, you can play," he added. "It doesn't matter how short you are. It's all about your heart and how well you compete on the court."
Besides, Patterson suggested, power forwards in the 6-8/6-9 size range never seem to have had much trouble making their mark in Utah.
"(Paul) Millsap, (Carlos) Boozer, Karl Malone — they've had great success, and they've had great point guards to go alongside them," he said. "Now that you have Deron Williams here, the sky's the limit pretty much."
At Kentucky, the sky fell early for the Wildcats, who could land five players in the first round of this year's draft.
Their season ended with an Elite Eight loss to West Virginia, nightmarishly closing what was supposed to be a dream season for Patterson, anticipated No. 1 overall pick John Wall, possible top-five selection DeMarcus Cousins, first-round round hopefuls Daniel Orton and Eric Bledsoe, and coach John Calipari.
And Patterson had to take something of a back seat to some of his high-profile freshman teammates, yielding points (his average dropped from 17.9 to 14.9 per game) and rebounds along the way.
Yet the 21-year-old Washington, D.C., native who led his Huntington, W.V., to three state championships has no reservations whatsoever about having returned for his third season in Lexington.
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