We need almost an entirely new rotation roster. Cal's major missing piece last season was a point guard. We had no leader on the floor, no quarterback. In crunch time ( which was nearly all the time, it was give the ball to Tyson and he will make something happen. He is a special player.
We also needed a shooting guard so Tyson could play as a small forward for most of the game. We needed better three point shooting. The hype we were fed was that Cal would assemble a team that would start several players who would average 40% on threes, as several of those players had done that in the past. Several of the new players disappointed in that, probably due to playing against better teams and better defenses than they had played against before.
I am not sold on the portal being the place we should focus on for talent. You can find talented players there as Madsen did, but all he did (which was a lot) was to quickly raise Cal from the basement to the first floor, just below average, and now the cupboard is empty and we have to watch him start all over again. The portal is full of players who were unhappy where they were playing. You don't jump schools if you are happy where you are. These are the players who may very well think of jumping ship again, as what has happened to Cal now.
I think the two most important positions are the point guard and the center, maybe less so than in the past, but those are still the players you build a team around. Therefore I think Madsen should recruit high schools and maybe JCs, for those two players, and not use the Portal as his primary source for them. I think center and point guard should be players who want to stay 3 or 4 years. The center and point guard should have the potential to play really good defense, because of the need to stop the ball at the point of attack, and the need to not give up easy buckets in the paint. These two positions need to focus the most on learning the game and learning team play on defense and offense. I think it takes 1, 2, or-3 years to develop into good solid college players at these positions. Shooters, scorers are a dime a dozen, in the Portal and in the recruiting pool. Going forward, I think teams will need to adapt their strategies to recruiting, and focus on getting some players who you can depend on to stay a few years, and provide the stability and glue to keep a program at a high level, alongside recruiting in the portal for need.
We also needed a shooting guard so Tyson could play as a small forward for most of the game. We needed better three point shooting. The hype we were fed was that Cal would assemble a team that would start several players who would average 40% on threes, as several of those players had done that in the past. Several of the new players disappointed in that, probably due to playing against better teams and better defenses than they had played against before.
I am not sold on the portal being the place we should focus on for talent. You can find talented players there as Madsen did, but all he did (which was a lot) was to quickly raise Cal from the basement to the first floor, just below average, and now the cupboard is empty and we have to watch him start all over again. The portal is full of players who were unhappy where they were playing. You don't jump schools if you are happy where you are. These are the players who may very well think of jumping ship again, as what has happened to Cal now.
I think the two most important positions are the point guard and the center, maybe less so than in the past, but those are still the players you build a team around. Therefore I think Madsen should recruit high schools and maybe JCs, for those two players, and not use the Portal as his primary source for them. I think center and point guard should be players who want to stay 3 or 4 years. The center and point guard should have the potential to play really good defense, because of the need to stop the ball at the point of attack, and the need to not give up easy buckets in the paint. These two positions need to focus the most on learning the game and learning team play on defense and offense. I think it takes 1, 2, or-3 years to develop into good solid college players at these positions. Shooters, scorers are a dime a dozen, in the Portal and in the recruiting pool. Going forward, I think teams will need to adapt their strategies to recruiting, and focus on getting some players who you can depend on to stay a few years, and provide the stability and glue to keep a program at a high level, alongside recruiting in the portal for need.
SFCityBear