The 2016 NBA draft was about as predictable as expected.LSU's Ben Simmons came off the board first to the Philadelphia 76ers, followed by Duke's Brandon Ingram second to the Los Angeles Lakers.In fact, there weren't even that many wild trades that took place other than a deal between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Orlando Magic, which will get detailed later. Perhaps the most unexpected factor of the 2016 class was the amount of unknown names that came to the podium in the first round.Regardless, winners and losers emerge right away. Let's take a look at the full draft results and grades before diving into the details.Biggest Question Mark: Boston CelticsWhat in the world was that'It's beyond easy to praise Boston Celtics general manager Danny Ainge, who stood by his building process and crafted a playoff roster this past season. He also set up the team with three first-round picks this year, starting at No. 3 overall, and had eight total.And believe it or not, Ainge kept all three picks in the opening round. Even better, things started off great with California's Jaylen Brown, a guy who stands at 6'7" and 223 pounds with some of the most upside in the class.It got weird from there, though.The Celtics used No. 16 on power forward Guerschon Yabusele and No. 23 on center Ante Zizic, not exactly household names. CBSSports.com's Matt Moore seemed to hit the proverbial nail on the head:Getting point guard Demetrius Jackson at No. 45 and power forward Ben Bentil at No. 52 were great values, but it's an otherwise head-scratching class.The Celtics seemed like a team ready to make a major trade or at least draft pro-ready prospects who could boost the playoff roster right away. Brown qualifies as both, but that's one of eight.Granted, the globe doesn't have any reason to doubt Ainge, and his master plan has worked thus far, hence an inability to slap his team as a loser of the process.Biggest Loser: Orlando MagicAbout that trade.The Thunder shipped power forward Serge Ibaka to the Magic, which is the portion of the news sure to get most of the headlines.NBA Communications announced the move Thursday, and Adrian Wojnarowskiof The Vertical followed with the revelation Orlando would also cough up the rights to the No. 11 pick, Domantas Sabonis.First of all, this is a huge, huge win for the Thunder. What better way to convince Kevin Durant to stick around than by adding Victor Oladipo, an insanely athletic guard who could help create quite the triple-headed monster with Durant and Russell Westbrook'It looks worse for the Magic. Orlando loses a guard who didn't fit well with budding point guard Elfrid Payton, sure, but they get a power forward heading into the last season of his current deal, according to Spotrac, meaning he's a glorified rental.One glance at a note by ESPN Stats & Info tells the story on Ibaka's quick decline, too:Even worse, Ibaka blocks (get it') promising power forward Aaron Gordon from getting much-needed playing time.Steady as she goes. The Magic are the league's worst example of a middling team right now, a franchise that has decided to throw away the patient approach in favor of a win-now outlook. The team has now shipped off Tobias Harris and Oladipo, and one could argue Orlando actually got worse during the draft process, which is rather impressive.Biggest Winner: Minnesota TimberwolvesAll the Minnesota Timberwolves had to do was sit around and win the draft.Maybe the Timberwolves wanted to trade up. Maybe not. Either way, the front office still got its guy when no teams made any moves and Providence point guard Kris Dunn fell to No. 5.Pause for a moment. This was already one of the scariest young teams in the league. Ricky Rubio on the point. Andrew Wiggins scoring from anywhere. Karl-Anthony Towns becoming one of the best young centers in the game. Don't forget quality young depth in the form of Zach LaVine, Shabazz Muhammad and Gorgui Dieng.Now the team adds Dunn, a guy who weighs in at 6'4" and 220 pounds whose best comparison might be Rajon Rondo and who was widely considered as the best point guard in the class by a mile.The unexpected fall gives Minnesota something else, tooflexibility. Rubio could find himself on the trade block sooner rather than later, which could help the team upgrade elsewhere. For now, though, Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune heard the team will play both guards together:Interesting, and it could work.There's no better feeling for an NBA team than sitting around with the assets it owns and getting just what it wants anyway. It also means there's no equal in the winner department.All the Timberwolves have to do now is let the team grow.All stats and info via ESPN.com unless otherwise specified.
Click here to read full news..