south bender;842759959 said:
Too early to be certain, but I prefer Mullins, because of his all around game. As I have said already on another thread, the only thing that Mathews does better is the 3, and Mullins is no slouch from beyond the arc. Mullins, from the little I have seen, is sort of the basketball equivalent of a 5 tool player.
Indeed, our team looks much more to be a team without Wallace, Brown, and Mathews.
+1. Mullins is the basketball equivalent of a 5-tool player. From what little we have seen, he can do it all, so far at least. The skills are there: shoot from distance, drive, pass, rebound, dribble, and play defense. The question is whether he can do it against a little better competition. The PAC12 was over-rated last season, but likely still well above Ivy League.
As to a comparison with Mathews, well, Mullins actually shot a little better than Mathews last season, 44% to 42% on threes, 47% to 42% overall FG%. Mullins shot free throws better as well, 86% career, while Mathews best year was 80% in 2016. I always expected Mathews to be a better free throw shooter, and he was a little disappointing to me in that area.
What impressed me most about Mullins so far is his court sense. When he has the ball, he seems to know where his teammates are. He is a pass first player, except when he is wide open. I remember him taking only one bad shot, that airball in the last game. He looks to make teammates better, and looks to get them the ball. He also impressed me with his rebounding and finding loose balls. He looked like Tyrone Wallace in that regard, which was Wallace's best quality, IMO. It is intuition, and really hard to teach. He has been Cal's #2 rebounder through 2 games, with 7 in each game, behind Rooks with a total of 15. That may be an aberration as he only averaged 4 rebs at Columbia. Defensively, he looks pretty good, so far.
Cal does look more like a team now, even though the competition has been weak. The signs are there. I wouldn't want to fully draw the conclusion until we see them in more games, and a game or two against a good defense. Cuonzo's teams of the last two years looked like more of a team as well in a few of their preseason games.