Deron Williams and Raymond Felton are running neck and neck as the second best point guard on the board behind Chris Paul.

Felton is proving himself to be a very capable outside shooter, while Williams is focusing on getting into NBA shape.  He has lost weight and is down to 200 pounds.

"I was too heavy in college," Williams admitted. "It wasn't like I wasn't exercising. We practiced three hours a day. But at night, you're eating at Dave and Busters and stuff like that. I really wasn't monitoring what I was eating. I had to change my eating habits."

Williams said he's down to 200 pounds and quicker and more explosive than ever. And Weber insists that Williams is a better athlete than he's given credit for. "He had that chunky body so you didn't always see him doing some things he's very capable of," Weber said. "But he can go and dunk on somebody whenever he wants to. And his hand-eye coordination is off the charts. Don't play him in ping-pong or anything like that. We did some skeet shooting with the guys and in a short time he was very proficient in that. He's an athlete in every sense of the word."

"I said this back at Thanksgiving and I'll say it again: Deron Williams is the best passer in the draft. Period," said former Utah coach Rick Majerus, who recruited Bogut and Marvin Williams and recently spent a week with Deron Williams in Milwaukee guiding him and other several other draft hopefuls through grueling, six-hour-a-day workouts.

"A week with him confirmed what I already knew," Majerus said. "He's a special point guard, kind of like a cross between [Rod] Strickland and Jason Kidd in this regard ? he can get the ball wherever he wants to on the court. I spent years trying to coach guys to do that. I had Andre Miller [at Utah], and he led the NBA in assists a couple of years ago. Deron is a better passer than Andre Miller. I'm telling you, the kid is special."