Trae Young is the Atlanta Hawks' franchise player. John Collins is already an awesome offensive player, with room to grow into an All-Star. Kevin Huerter is coming off a supremely underrated rookie season in which he established himself as one of the league's most versatile shot-makers. De'Andre Hunter, the No. 4 overall pick in the 2019 NBA Draft, is perfectly suited to a role of guarding the opposition's best player, providing lineup flexibility, and knocking down open shots and finishing on the break.

The Hawks, clearly, have one of the brightest young cores in basketball, and that's even before accounting for the presence of Cam Reddish, a player who many believed was a dark-horse candidate for No. 1 pick before his freshman year at Duke. As a result of his underwhelming freshman campaign and the wealth of young talent already on hand in Atlanta, it's been easy to overlook Reddish in assessing the Hawks' prospects for contention down the line.

Young, though, understands exactly what a coup it was for his team to snap up a player of Reddish's talent with the No. 10 overall pick.

“With us being able to get Cam at 10, I think that’s a big steal,” he said, per Michael Scotto of The Athletic. “I thought when we traded back and had the 10th pick I didn’t think we were going to get Cam because I saw him play in high school and his talent. Us getting him is big.”

Reddish averaged 13.5 points, 3.7 rebounds, 1.9 assists, and 1.6 steals in 29.7 minutes per game for the Blue Devils, shooting an ugly 35.6 percent from the field and 33.3 percent from deep on a high number of attempts. Expect him to compete for backup minutes with Atlanta at both forward spots in 2019-20.