oski003 said:
SFCityBear said:
oski003 said:
Those 4 players leaving were all HIGH 4 stars in consecutive classes - 3 in the same class. Bennett struck lightning. Kihei Clark was the team's 5th or 6th best player and a good support player to the BIG FOUR, who may all leave. He's a good coach, but they are not an example of a team that won with low recruiting classes because he struck gold 3 years ago and kept 3 top 50 players for 3 years and 1 for 4 years. Diakite, the 4th year, was #27 overall recruit in his class.
When you have a solid foundation of 4 very good players who are all returning, it is hard to get a highly rated recruiting class. When your entire roster turns over, it is easier to get a highly rated recruiting class.
On the face of it, I find this a little hard to follow. Could you please clarify by name which players you are talking about? And which recruit ranking service you are using? I use RCSI composite rankings which is the one used by sports-reference.com. RCSI is a composite of several ranking services, including ESPN,Rivals, Scout, 247 and sometimes others.
Sticking with RCSI, Kyle Guy is ranked #32 but is still a 5-star recruit by ESPN etc. The class of which you speak and you say kept 3 top 50 players for 3 years apparently is Guy, Jerome (RCSI #46), and De' Andre Hunter (RCSI #74) Hunter is not a high ranked 4-star, because he is ranked in the bottom half of 4-stars, which is usually a group of 70 or so players, where he would be ranked around #44 of 70. We should also mention that Hunter was a project, and went through 3 years of outstanding progressive development, and a lot of credit has to go to his coaches.
Diakite was not ranked in his 2015 recruiting class by RCSI, but did appear in the ESPN top 100 at #37, or 247 Sports which had him ranked at #32. They also ranked him at #27, possibly an early ranking. Since RCSI is a composite including both ESPN and 247, I'm not sure how he did not make their final RCSI ranking. Maybe because he redshirted?
We should also mention that Bennett also picked up high 4-stars Jay Huff #61 in 2017, and Braxton Key #56 as a junior transfer from Alabama. I'm not sure how Key was allowed to play this year without sitting out a year.
I agree with your conclusions on recruiting, but not so much on Clark. Without Clark, Virginia does not make it to the Final, as Clark won one game almost single-handed with his performance in the 2nd half.
I would also be interested in your analysis of Texas Tech, as they made it to the Final with no one and dones and only one high ranked four-star recruit, Khavon Moore, #46 who played in only one game this season, and another high ranked 4-star Brandone Francis, #38, who is 6th or 7th man and does not start.
Which game did Clark almost win single-handedly?
Here are his points each tournament game:
1) First Round: 3
2) Second Round: 9
3) Sweet 16: 12
4) Elite Eight: 2
5) Final Four: 9
6) Final: 3
Again, good support player. Trust me. He was not the one the defense worried about.
As for the other recruiting rankings, besides the fact that your source doesn't acknowledge a top 30 recruit, our data is close. Our conclusions are different. I think that when you have a team of four Jabari Bird type players all playing injury free in their 3rd or 4th year, that is going to be a good team. As for the coaching, Bennett is a good coach. I make no comment on Texas Tech.
Well, we just have different opinions. As to Kihei Clark, I think the Virginia coach and players have a higher opinion of him. He saved Virginia's bacon at least against Oregon and Auburn in the NCAA. They don't win either of those games without him. Against Oregon he had 6 assists and 12 points, and maybe more important, he shut down Oregon's best player, Payton Pritchard on defense. Against Auburn, it was his spectacular last second pass for an assist which tied the game and sent it into overtime, allowing Virginia to win.
With all due respect, a point guard is best measured by intangibles like his heart, his aggressiveness, his control of the pace of play and directing the offense, his setting up of teammates for open looks, his passing and ball handling skills, and his defense at point of attack. Any points he scores are usually gravy. Nice to have, but not necessary. Not many point guards are feared for their shooting prowess.
Here are some recent articles on Clark:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2019/03/30/hes-killer-virginias-kihei-clark-might-be-small-he-delivers-big-plays/?utm_term=.96c8a9cea3bc https://slate.com/culture/2019/03/kihei-clarks-virginia-purdue-march-madness-2019.html Finally, please consider that Virginia had those same Four High 4-star players the year before, 2018, and in that year, without Clark to run that team, Virginia was blown out in the first round of the NCAA by lowly University of Maryland Baltimore County. Who? They whipped Virginia 74-54. A year later, with unranked recruit Kihei Clark, Virginia wins the NCAA title. I rest my case.
I am someone who has little faith in recruit rankings. I published a spreadsheet here a few years ago which detailed the college and pro careers of one year's top 100 recruits. I tracked all the details, and what I found was that only 40% of those players lived up to their rankings at some point in their careers.
Recruits are ranked primarily for their ability to score, and very seldom for their defense or other skills, like passing, ball handling, rebounding. All the rankings seem to care about is can he shoot, and can he score. And of course, is he athletic? That is big one. Jaylen Brown came to Cal very highly ranked, but he couldn't shoot well, and could not handle the ball well, and he did not pass the ball often. His defense was spotty, but he was so athletic, he could chase anyone down from behind and block his shot, without getting called for a foul. That entire starting lineup never lived up to their individual recruit rankings, IMO. Rabb was never dominant, as I was led to expect. Bird was no 5-star. He could not play defense, and had to learn it from the ground up. Wallace was no point guard, and could not shoot, and was slow on defense. Mathews was a one-tool player with a three point shot and nothing else. The team finished in 3rd place, not as successful as we expected. They had two key injuries for the NCAA, but with highly ranked players like Rabb, Brown and Mathews, they should have been able to beat Hawaii, a team with no 4-stars, only 3-stars and 2-stars, and beat them easily. Brown had the worst game of his Cal career, but even with Rabb, Mathews and Singer playing well.
As to your statement that if you have 4 Jabari Birds together in the 3rd or 4th year, then you have a good team, I would say not necessarily, and probably not likely. The team would have to include a center and a point guard. You saw what happened to Virginia in 2018, when the point guard was not as good as Clark in running the team. And the team would need to have a good coach. Players need coaching, today more than ever, IMO, to learn how to play together on offense and play tough defense as a team.
SFCityBear