Scouting reports on every projected first rounder and many second rounders have already been released and can be found by following this link.

So with the draft mere hours away now, I've emptied out my scouting notebook to deliver reports on players that I have not done full articles on.

- Kyle Weaver Of Washington State

Weaver is an excellent defender and will be able to guard three positions in the NBA due to his length, quickness, and mentality.  

He has a good enough handle to run the point, but can he run an NBA offense?  If he can, he will become a taller Rajon Rondo.  He is a good passer and has a good handle.  He uses a change of pace dribble well and also has an incredibly quick first move.  

Weaver can finish well and is somewhat of a slinky in the air.

His future depends on whether or not he has enough skill at the point guard slot because he doesn?t have a good enough shot to be a shooting guard.

- Jamont Gordon Of Mississippi State

Gordon is probably the scrappiest player in this draft and would be a top-10 pick if you wanted to play five-on-five on the blacktop up in Rucker at midnight following the draft.

He is every bit as strong in traffic as he is left-handed.  His athleticism is subtle, but he has a surprisingly quick open floor dribble.  His penetration moves get him into the lane, but it is extremely difficult for him to finish because of his lack of elevation.

Gordon is a flashier Derek Fisher; not as good of a defender, but a better creator and purer ballplayer.  If he can develop a Fisher caliber spot-up game, then he could have a similar career.

- Shan Foster Of Vanderbilt

Foster is an excellent shooter who moves extremely well without the ball but needs to improve his creation off the dribble.  He does shoot it well off the dribble, but his dribble moves are not nearly elusive enough.

The mechanics of his shot are excellent; he has great extension on his follow through, which allows him to shoot over taller defenders and is incredibly balanced.

He has a good mid-range game, and although he won?t be a lockdown defender, he is hard-worker and is clearly passable on that end of the floor.

- Sonny Weems Of Arkansas

Weems is one of the best athletes in the draft and uses that athleticism well in the way he cuts to the bucket and finishes slams.

He moves really well without the ball and has a nice burst of extra quickness when he curls as soon as he catches the ball.  He has a very consistent mid-range shot but is a little too streaky from distance to be considered an above average prospect.

- Gary Forbes Of UMass

Forbes looks like an undersized small forward who won?t be able to knife into NBA lanes with the ease he did in college.  Many of those shots he got off in conference play ended up getting blocked against an athletic team like Syracuse.  

His strength comes from driving into the lane to challenge defenders and drawing contact.  He is at his best here when roving the baseline because he?s a threat from block to corner.

He flies into the paint nicely but sometimes becomes vulnerable to player control fouls and needs to work on jump stopping and going straight up.  When he slows down on his drives just a little bit, he does a good job of driving and dishing.

Because he is an average athlete and ,a below average shooter (29.2% from beyond the arc), it is difficult to imagine him being an effective NBA point guard.  He has a decent handle, so he might with the emphasis on might, be able to play some point guard, but then you?re looking at a Mardy Collins.

- Mike Green Of Butler

Green has big of a bag of tricks at the point guard position as anyone in this draft.  He clearly maximizes his athletic abilities on the floor, but he misses a lot of layups when he gets to the rim due to his lack of size.  

He is really quick with the first step, uses nice hesitation moves and has a compact shot, though it needs to be more consistent.

But he is a difference maker despite not being one of the absolute least talented players in the draft.

- Mike Taylor Of Iowa State

He is an inventive dribbler and uses it and his quickness and elevation to create his own shot.  He is definitely a scoring point guard and is acrobatic in the air and has a smooth shot from distance.

Taylor?s game is a little too unrefined for some coach?s taste, but his skill level is extremely high.

- Jamar Butler Of Ohio State

Butler has a great perimeter shot and can already shoot from NBA range; all of his 3?s against UMass in the NIT were from NBA distance.  He gets extremely high arc and nice rotation on his jumper and is incredibly quick from the point of catch to the follow through thanks to a compact motion.

He is not incredibly quick with the dribble, but he has a second gear and is therefore deceivingly quick.

He has a good eye for creativity with the pass, but needs to limit turnovers.  Butler does a good job of maintaining his dribble and using it to get his own shot off or kick it back out for a perimeter shot.

Christopher Reina is the executive editor of RealGM.  He can be reached at Chris.Reina@RealGM.com where he may use your draft questions in a future mailbag edition