A graphic with side-by-side photos of UConn's Paige Bueckers holding the ball with two hands and USC's Kiki Iriafen standing and looking off to the side. The text "Final WNBA draft board" is overlaid at the bottom in all caps, and the orange Locked On Women's Basketball logo is in the top right corner.
UConn's Paige Bueckers (left) is the presumed No. 1 pick in Monday's draft, but where will USC's Kiki Iriafen (right) and others land? (Photo credits: Left: Nathan Ray Seebeck, Imagn Images; Right: James Snook, Imagn Images)

In the latest episode of Locked On Women’s Basketball, Hunter Cruse, Emily Adler and Lincoln Shafer discuss their final draft board ahead of the 2025 WNBA Draft on Monday.

Adler explains the quantitative system they use in their draft board to compare prospects:

“I borrowed the 20-80 scouting grade system from baseball, which is to say that basically grades fall on a normal distribution curve between the 20th percentile and the 80th percentile, because that’s where … [nearly all] of a sample falls in a normal distribution curve. … And you progress basically in units of 10. At the middle you progress [in] units of five, because it’s more granular. There’s more people there.

“Anyway, this is [a] way to basically assign grades to prospects and then map … those grades onto what it means for a quality of WNBA player, so that we can reasonably project players and compare them, not only within years, but across years and across eras. So … we talk to each other throughout the year. We talk to other people throughout the year. But we’re watching a lot of stuff, and we’re evaluating a lot of things.”

Shafer sums up how the top of this draft class looks heading into Monday’s selections:

“It’s a deep class of role player bets. There’s not a ton of star potential in ways that the last couple draft classes have had [with] the one outstanding player or the two outstanding players at the top and some other high-upside players. This is a lot of players with capped ceilings who are probably going to be productive role players. And that’s a bit different, and honestly, it’s kind of more fun that way for me because I like players with high floors that are kind of role player bets.”

Make sure to subscribe to the Locked On Women’s Basketball podcast to keep learning about the WNBA, women’s college basketball, basketball history and much more! Plus, follow along with all of our coverage of the 2025 WNBA Draft at The Next!

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