Like I said before, hope he knows a second language.
Well Finney-Smith went undrafted but made the Mavs his rookie season and started almost half their games. He is a pretty good guy go compare Robinson to:
Finney-Smith at the NBA draft combined measured 6'7.8" in shoes, with a wingspan of 6'11.8" and weighed in at 213 lbs
Robinson at his last listed camp in 2014 measured 6'8.5" in shoes with a wingspan of 6'11.5" and UF lists his weight now at 200 lbs.
So to me size wise they are quite similar players. We will see what Robinson measures in this years NBA draft combine.
As for as production at UF on a per 40 minute basis each players' last year at UF:
Finney-Smith: 18.5 points, 10.5 rebounds, 2.6 assists, 2.4 turnovers
Robinson: 16.8 points, 9.2 rebounds, 1.0 assists, 1.6 turnovers
Shooting:
Finney-Smith: 50.5% inside the arc, 36.6% from the arc and 73.3% from the FT line.
Robinson: 52.4% inside the arc, 39.1% from the arc and 72.3% from the FT line.
So Finney-Smith is a slightly more productive player, but Robinson is a slightly better shooter. Finney-Smith also had a slightly better PER than Robinson, but Robinson has the advantage of coming out a year earlier than Finney-Smith.
It seems pretty clear to me that if Finney-Smith could get in the right situation and make an NBA roster, then Robinson could too. It also seems pretty clear to me than an NBA team could well look at Robinson's athleticism and UF players particuarly SFs making rosters despite not being drafted or being picked in the second round and think Robinson is more worthy of spending a draft pick on than some other players that draft analysts think are likely to be picked. We shall see.