ESPN NBA Draft analyst Fran Fraschilla talks the Knicks’ best-case scenario, the Porzingis problem and the Lonzo Ball smokescreens with The Post’s Justin Terranova.

Q: If you are the Knicks, who are you hoping falls to No. 8?

A: Jonathan Isaac. There’s a lot of risk there, but also a lot of reward. He’s got a high a ceiling as anyone in the lottery. Isaac is viewed as not physically ready for the league because he has a skinny frame, but at 6-11 he has two-way ability, knows how to play the game, is a high-character guy. And the last guy people were concerned over body type turned out to be pretty good. His name was Kristaps Porzingis.

Q: Now the Knicks just need Porzingis to stay in New York, right?

A: I don’t think Porzingis is going to finish his career with the Knicks, let’s put it that way. In the long term he’s eventually going to want to be on a winning team. Hopefully that will happen before the end of this decade. I don’t know what their plan is, though. They have a very good scouting staff because someone convinced Phil Jackson to draft Porzingis.

Q: Why is Markelle Fultz going No. 1?

A: Getting your own quality shot in the NBA is an art form. There are very few players who can get a clean look at the basket on their own without the benefit of teammates, and Markelle Fultz — with his combination of size, skill and athleticism at the college level — created an open shot for himself anytime he wanted. He also has a great feel for the game and is a willing passer. He has all the attributes of being an All-Star one day: highly competitive, wants to be great and knows he has work to do to get there.

Q: Any chance the Lakers pass on Lonzo Ball?

A: The rumors that they may not [draft him] are just smokescreens. He’s as good a passer as I can remember in the past 20 years. He is going to struggle as an NBA rookie, but with his combination of size for a point guard, his ability to find teammates who don’t even know they’re open and his outside shooting … [it] is going to allow him to make an immediate impact on the league. I don’t think the Lakers can pass up on his combination of size and athleticism. He’s going to make the game fun for his Lakers teammates to play as any player in this draft. When I think of his passing ability, Magic Johnson and Jason Kidd come to mind.

Q: At UCLA, he made his teammates more unselfish. Will that translate to the NBA?

A: When you’re an unselfish a player as Lonzo Ball, that unselfishness rubs off. Their teammates know even if they give up a good shot to get a teammate a great shot, they’ll eventually get the ball back . His unselfishness is contagious. And if it’s not, the teammate who is selfish will look silly.