Okay fine, how many teams that we would compare ourselves to around the country are in better shape in the front court?
quote:You're probably right. For me, the concerns I have down low are amplified by the concerns I also have on the wing. Honestly, I think right now we are more fragile and "worse" at the guard position than the post position due to lack of depth and experience (although the talent is there).quote:
I don't see how you can look at our post position (...) and think "yeah, we will be fine there."
My counter would be, what team do you look at around the conference and think they're in a better situation in the front court than we are?
Tyler Davis is probably the best returning big man in the league (though Kingsley might come back) and Trocha was making some big strides by the end of the year.
quote:I won't act like I know the ins-and-outs of every other roster in the nation. And no team jumps out as a great returning front court. I do know I'd take Tyler over any returning post in the nation. He alone makes our top end potential extremely high. Beyond that, I think it's fair to be concerned about how the front court plays out.
Okay fine, how many teams that we would compare ourselves to around the country are in better shape in the front court?
quote:Agree that he will play the 4, similar to this past year. But then the question is, who provides backup at the 3?
I would think that Hogg will play some at the 4, especially when Davis is in the game. If Hogg can put on some weight and strength over the summer we may see him at the 4 quite a bit.
quote:Khadeem Lattin was pretty meh as a freshman. Much better as a sophomore.
Back to the posts, I am glad he doesn't need to start, but I don't see any reason why Robert Williams couldn't be as good as Jamel McKay or khadeem lattin if we needed him to play that role next year.
quote:I expect Williams to be the same quality of player at the four as Hogg was at the three this year. That being a decent to pretty good college player with high upside.quote:Khadeem Lattin was pretty meh as a freshman. Much better as a sophomore.
Back to the posts, I am glad he doesn't need to start, but I don't see any reason why Robert Williams couldn't be as good as Jamel McKay or khadeem lattin if we needed him to play that role next year.
And McKay was an elite player last year. Would be crazy to expect anything close from Williams next year.
quote:If Eubanks lives up to the recruiting hype, then that's great. Just a big question mark at a lot of spots in the 2-deep rotation. And most of the answers are predicated on huge minute jumps across the board
Eubanks? It's not like our positions are really all that important offensively anyway except center.
quote:Agree that the front court is in better shape than the backcourt. But catastrophic injury potential and/or foul trouble expectations would be higher for the front court, and we don't really have much room for either.
Guys, half of our season is versus the SEC.
Other than Kentucky, who is going to have a better front-court than Trocha/Davis/Miller/Williams? Plus maybe 6'9" spanish kid Eric Vila.
Davis may very well finish with first or second team all-conference honors if he continues on his current arc. He is going to be a matchup problem for most other SEC teams. And Trocha was really starting to break out again at the end of last year. With increased minutes next season, won't surprise me if he has a solid season. Meanwhile Miller is what he is - an experienced hustle guy who can chip in at spots and then you have a top-50 4-star recruit in Williams who is very athletic and has plastic man arms with a 7'4" wingspan.
We are in good shape in the frontcourt IMO.
The biggest hole in our roster, IMO, is lack of an experienced lead guard. If we just had a solid returning junior or senior PG right now, I'd be totally fine with our current roster. There are plenty of good pieces at the 2-5 positions.
quote:Well yeah, catastrophic injury will sink most teams. In today's college game, you often don't have really good players willing to sit on the bench so most teams suffer a ton if they lose their best big.quote:Agree that the front court is in better shape than the backcourt. But catastrophic injury potential and/or foul trouble expectations would be higher for the front court, and we don't really have much room for either.
Guys, half of our season is versus the SEC.
Other than Kentucky, who is going to have a better front-court than Trocha/Davis/Miller/Williams? Plus maybe 6'9" spanish kid Eric Vila.
Davis may very well finish with first or second team all-conference honors if he continues on his current arc. He is going to be a matchup problem for most other SEC teams. And Trocha was really starting to break out again at the end of last year. With increased minutes next season, won't surprise me if he has a solid season. Meanwhile Miller is what he is - an experienced hustle guy who can chip in at spots and then you have a top-50 4-star recruit in Williams who is very athletic and has plastic man arms with a 7'4" wingspan.
We are in good shape in the frontcourt IMO.
The biggest hole in our roster, IMO, is lack of an experienced lead guard. If we just had a solid returning junior or senior PG right now, I'd be totally fine with our current roster. There are plenty of good pieces at the 2-5 positions.
quote:When you intentionally put together a team with four seniors though, that's what's going to happen.quote:If Eubanks lives up to the recruiting hype, then that's great. Just a big question mark at a lot of spots in the 2-deep rotation. And most of the answers are predicated on huge minute jumps across the board
Eubanks? It's not like our positions are really all that important offensively anyway except center.
Tyler 28 mpg instead of 20
Admon 30 instead of 20
Hogg 30 instead of 20
Tonny 28 instead of 16
Eubanks 15-20 instead 1
It's the result of graduating over half of all minutes played, and 1/2 the guys expected to fill in didn't play any meaningful minutes last year, or weren't even on the roster. If all the returning guys make the gains you reasonably expect, and all the newcomers can contribute Day 1, then everything is fine.
quote:Last year we obviously were able to overcome injuries and MIA people because we had a far deeper team than normal.
Well that's the problem with this one year strategy of rosters in college hoops is that basically anyone who isn't a blue blood team is going to have issues if they have injuries or foul trouble.
quote:Definitely. And fortunately, we have 4 guys that averaged ~22mpg on a Sweet 16 run returning. So outside of PG, we are depending on huge jumps from guys that have shown something, instead of a huge group of freshmen.
When you intentionally put together a team with four seniors though, that's what's going to happen.
quote:I'm not just talking about Tyler. I'm not 100% confident we could deal with an injury to Tonny or even Tavario/Williams. I don't expect us to have equal caliber talent sitting on the bench in case of injury. But we don't even have extra bodies to throw at potential problems.
Well yeah, catastrophic injury will sink most teams. In today's college game, you often don't have really good players willing to sit on the bench so most teams suffer a ton if they lose their best big.
quote:I think we should feel 'reasonably' good about Gilder, Trocha, Davis, and Hogg. They have been vetted and shown enough that we can see good players there. And we pretty much know who/what Tavario Miller is.quote:Definitely. And fortunately, we have 4 guys that averaged ~22mpg on a Sweet 16 run returning. So outside of PG, we are depending on huge jumps from guys that have shown something, instead of a huge group of freshmen.
When you intentionally put together a team with four seniors though, that's what's going to happen.
quote:If Tyler had gotten hurt last season, I don't think we win the SEC. So, yeah, totally agree that a major injury to Davis would probably be devastating. He is a unique asset in the post.quote:I'm not just talking about Tyler. I'm not 100% confident we could deal with an injury to Tonny or even Tavario/Williams. I don't expect us to have equal caliber talent sitting on the bench in case of injury. But we don't even have extra bodies to throw at potential problems.
Well yeah, catastrophic injury will sink most teams. In today's college game, you often don't have really good players willing to sit on the bench so most teams suffer a ton if they lose their best big.
quote:Tyler and Tonny had relatively normal foul rates (4.6 and 4.2 per 40 minutes, respectively). Tavario, for reference, was almost 50% higher at 6.8 per 40.
In terms of foul trouble, wac you got the statistics handy, did either Davis or Trocha show much tendency for foul trouble? I don't recall either being a consistent foul magnet. Sure they got into foul trouble here and there but not a ton. Now Miller on the other hand....
quote:No one that is paying attention thinks we'll be the same caliber team next year.
Yeah, that's the big thing people keep missing. We're not going to be as good next year as we were this year. And that's okay.
quote:i think minute allocation/roster management is a different discussion from overall success expectations.
Yeah, but in these threads when we're comparing minutes and who's playing where and stuff like that it seems to get glossed over that compared to this year we're obviously going to have some holes because we simply aren't going to be as good.
quote:Hogg seems like a prototypical 3. I get that it's advantageous to put him at the 4 in certain situations, but why would you prefer him to play at a different position?
I prefer Hogg at the 4 and to do that he needs to build strength and weight and work some more on both using his body to post up and on developing a runner or fade away.
He and Tonny can be stretch 4s or extra tall SFs though asking Tonny to guard a guard--even on a switch--is a too tall order. But neither is likely to do well on a true 4 either without more S&C and development. I think that's why we saw Tonny at high post so much and also explains why he developed and coaches let him shoot the 3: to truly stretch the floor and attempt to empty the key.
quote:Agree. So does that mean we should have top-3 in SEC and top-25 nationally expectations?
I guess my point is that we're only in "questionable shape" when you compare us to a team like we had last year, most of the teams in our league and around the country would probably swap rosters with us without blinking.
quote:I agree with this completely. As it stands now, we're also deeper in the post so it makes sense to have all of his minutes at the three.
Hogg seems like a prototypical 3. I get that it's advantageous to put him at the 4 in certain situations, but why would you prefer him to play at a different position?
quote:I have top 4 in the SEC and top 35 nationally expectations.quote:Agree. So does that mean we should have top-3 in SEC and top-25 nationally expectations?
I guess my point is that we're only in "questionable shape" when you compare us to a team like we had last year, most of the teams in our league and around the country would probably swap rosters with us without blinking.
quote:
Hogg seems like a prototypical 3. I get that it's advantageous to put him at the 4 in certain situations, but why would you prefer him to play at a different position?
quote:I think we should be top 30-ish. And yeah, until someone else in the SEC actually proves they're worth half a crap, why not top 3?
Agree. So does that mean we should have top-3 in SEC and top-25 nationally expectations?