Taking a look at the best No. 20 picks in NBA Draft history.

The Pacers finished the transitional 2016 season in encouraging fashion. They made the playoffs and gave the second-seed Toronto Raptors all they could handle.

Paul George proved that there would be no long-term effects from his debilitating Team USA injury and Myles Turner flashed glimpses of incredible promise in his rookie year.

The Pacers capped it off by firing one of the best defensive minds in basketball for nary a reason other than Larry Bird seemed bored.

Ok, so not everything was encouraging, but the offseason is here and the Pacers have spent the last several weeks scouting players for the upcoming NBA Draft.

This year, Indiana will select someone with the 20th pick in the first round. While it’s unlikely that anyone with the talent of Myles Turner will fall that far, Larry Bird has actually done quite well in this section of the draft.

Since 2005, Danny Granger, Kawhi Leonard, Solomon Hill, and Roy Hibbert were all snagged between picks 15 and 23. Of course, they also swung and miss on Shawne Williams at 17, and Leonard never played a game for the Pacers, but there is value to be had in the mid-first round, even though the propensity to completely swing and miss is obviously much higher.

The 20th pick is not sexy, but history proves that the Pacers could definitely find a useful player in that slot. The Toronto Raptors have selected 20th in the last two drafts, and underwhelmed with their selections of Delon Wright and Bruno Caboclo. But Chicago selected Tony Snell the year before in the same spot, and he’s been a key element on the Bulls’ bench for several years now. Very few home runs fall all the way to 20, but the list of doubles and triples that have been snagged with that spot might surprise you.

Let’s look at the top seven 20th picks ever, and dream about what the Pacers could potentially wind up with.