Can any of you very smart people come up w/ a depth chart with and without Lars?
I can't come up with anthing close to a depth chart as yet, but some thoughts:calfanz said:
Can any of you very smart people come up w/ a depth chart with and without Lars?
My sense of irony compels me to try and come up with a depth chart:calfanz said:
Can any of you very smart people come up w/ a depth chart with and without Lars?
Big C said:My sense of irony compels me to try and come up with a depth chart:calfanz said:
Can any of you very smart people come up w/ a depth chart with and without Lars?
PG:
Austin
Brown
(maybe Bradley)
(maybe South)
(maybe Alters... is he still coming?)
SG:
Bradley
South (they will play together sometimes, too)
Harris-Dyson
SF:
Gordon
Klonares
Harris-Dyson
Bigs:
Anticevich
Kelly
Thorpe
Kuany
(insert the Big German in somewhere, depending on if we get him and if he's ready to play)
The situation is extremely liquid at this point! We don't really know ho good the new guys are going to be (or Gordon, for that matter), nor do we know how they will all fit into the new system.
caltagjohnson said:
No quality big man will be a serious handicap. Most Pac 12 teams have some QUALITY siize. We have guys whose main skill is being talll.
I think we had to expect that. The odds of getting a quality big man as a freshman, and have him playing like an upperclassman as a freshman, are very slim, maybe one in a thousand. There is only a handful of good big recruits every year, and 350 schools chasing them. The big name schools can get 2 or 3 of them in a class. The odds of getting a good one for a coach arriving as late as Fox has arrived are out of sight. Good grad transfer bigs are even rarer.caltagjohnson said:
No quality big man will be a serious handicap. Most Pac 12 teams have some QUALITY siize. We have guys whose main skill is being talll.
And they're not even that tall, really. Echo other poster's disappointment about Vanover leaving, but now, it's water under the bridge (Arkansas joke only intended in retrospect).caltagjohnson said:
No quality big man will be a serious handicap. Most Pac 12 teams have some QUALITY siize. We have guys whose main skill is being talll.
89Bear said:
I think that Bradley and South can rebound well for their position and size.
I wonder if we will see a lot of Bradley, South, and Austin together on the floor. All three have the ability to score and get up and down the court. Big guys then would need to be able to rebound and defend.
And if we start Kelly and Anticevich, we'll have the shortest lineup in the conference. To do what you suggest, I think Thorpe and Kuany might be the better bigs to give you some defense and rebounding. Kuany looks to me like he can run the floor, so I'd like to see him at SF some of the time in a bigger lineup. Much depends on whether the injured players, Jacobi and Thorpe, can give us good minutes. Still some holes, and a lot of questions, which makes it interesting. Biggest question in my mind is Fox. Can he coach? He is the key to the whole thing. I wonder if Brown or even South can move ahead of Austin. We need better point guard play at both ends. In any case, so many freshmen and sophs means we are not likely to be very good until they mature in a year or two.89Bear said:
I think that Bradley and South can rebound well for their position and size.
I wonder if we will see a lot of Bradley, South, and Austin together on the floor. All three have the ability to score and get up and down the court. Big guys then would need to be able to rebound and defend.
graguna said:
my best guess on the starting line-up:
austin
south
bradley
harris-dyson
anticevich ( someone has to start but many will get minutes )
Don't you think that lineup is too short? Harris-Dyson has some value off the bench, but playing Anticevich and Dyson together for long stretches, two guys who don't score (Unless the Ant can improve a lot over the summer), is a risk, isn't it?graguna said:
my best guess on the starting line-up:
austin
south
bradley
harris-dyson
anticevich ( someone has to start but many will get minutes )
SFCityBear said:And if we start Kelly and Anticevich, we'll have the shortest lineup in the conference. To do what you suggest, I think Thorpe and Kuany might be the better bigs to give you some defense and rebounding. Kuany looks to me like he can run the floor, so I'd like to see him at SF some of the time in a bigger lineup. Much depends on whether the injured players, Jacobi and Thorpe, can give us good minutes. Still some holes, and a lot of questions, which makes it interesting. Biggest question in my mind is Fox. Can he coach? He is the key to the whole thing. I wonder if Brown or even South can move ahead of Austin. We need better point guard play at both ends. In any case, so many freshmen and sophs means we are not likely to be very good until they mature in a year or two.89Bear said:
I think that Bradley and South can rebound well for their position and size.
I wonder if we will see a lot of Bradley, South, and Austin together on the floor. All three have the ability to score and get up and down the court. Big guys then would need to be able to rebound and defend.
I agree there is a good chance those three will start, or at least be on the court together at times. I am a little worried, with Austin a 6'0", South at 6'2" and Bradley at 6'4". I guess that is not tiny, but there's not a lot of length there, and I wonder how well they will be able to guard the perimeter.Civil Bear said:89Bear said:
I think that Bradley and South can rebound well for their position and size.
I wonder if we will see a lot of Bradley, South, and Austin together on the floor. All three have the ability to score and get up and down the court. Big guys then would need to be able to rebound and defend.
Yes, all three will start.
I really like your optimism with respect to Kelly and Anticevich. They do have the height and bulk to become good rebounders. Rebounding can be taught to an extent. Blocking out can be taught. Athleticism can not be taught, maybe improved, but not learned. Anticipation comes with experience.tsubamoto2001 said:
Kelly and Anticevich had the best rebounding rates (save for Roman Davis, who played a lot less than both of them) on the team last season. For Kelly, he profiles as a center anyway, because of his girth at 260 lbs. He also seems to have decently long arms for his height. I don't think a front court with them is all that undersized in the college game these days.SFCityBear said:And if we start Kelly and Anticevich, we'll have the shortest lineup in the conference. To do what you suggest, I think Thorpe and Kuany might be the better bigs to give you some defense and rebounding. Kuany looks to me like he can run the floor, so I'd like to see him at SF some of the time in a bigger lineup. Much depends on whether the injured players, Jacobi and Thorpe, can give us good minutes. Still some holes, and a lot of questions, which makes it interesting. Biggest question in my mind is Fox. Can he coach? He is the key to the whole thing. I wonder if Brown or even South can move ahead of Austin. We need better point guard play at both ends. In any case, so many freshmen and sophs means we are not likely to be very good until they mature in a year or two.89Bear said:
I think that Bradley and South can rebound well for their position and size.
I wonder if we will see a lot of Bradley, South, and Austin together on the floor. All three have the ability to score and get up and down the court. Big guys then would need to be able to rebound and defend.
SFCityBear said:I really like your optimism with respect to Kelly and Anticevich. They do have the height and bulk to become good rebounders. Rebounding can be taught to an extent. Blocking out can be taught. Athleticism can not be taught, maybe improved, but not learned. Anticipation comes with experience.tsubamoto2001 said:
Kelly and Anticevich had the best rebounding rates (save for Roman Davis, who played a lot less than both of them) on the team last season. For Kelly, he profiles as a center anyway, because of his girth at 260 lbs. He also seems to have decently long arms for his height. I don't think a front court with them is all that undersized in the college game these days.SFCityBear said:And if we start Kelly and Anticevich, we'll have the shortest lineup in the conference. To do what you suggest, I think Thorpe and Kuany might be the better bigs to give you some defense and rebounding. Kuany looks to me like he can run the floor, so I'd like to see him at SF some of the time in a bigger lineup. Much depends on whether the injured players, Jacobi and Thorpe, can give us good minutes. Still some holes, and a lot of questions, which makes it interesting. Biggest question in my mind is Fox. Can he coach? He is the key to the whole thing. I wonder if Brown or even South can move ahead of Austin. We need better point guard play at both ends. In any case, so many freshmen and sophs means we are not likely to be very good until they mature in a year or two.89Bear said:
I think that Bradley and South can rebound well for their position and size.
I wonder if we will see a lot of Bradley, South, and Austin together on the floor. All three have the ability to score and get up and down the court. Big guys then would need to be able to rebound and defend.
But looking at rebounding rates when compared to the rest of the Cal team is misleading, because last season, Cal was the worst or 2nd worst rebounding team out of 351 teams in the NCAA Division 1, depending on whose statistics you look at. Being among the best rebounders on an awful rebounding team does not say much. And if rebounding rate is a key stat, then maybe Fox should take a look at Blake Welle as a potential starter. His rebounding rate was better than Kelly, Anticevich, Davis, or Sueing (the team's best rebounder game after game).
In the eyeball test, I wondered all season why Kelly could not get more rebounds, with his size. He does not jump well, but still he got very few. I seldom saw him get one, and can't remember hardly any from Anticevich. Thorpe has the genes from his father, and I hope anticipation for rebounds was one of them, and if he has recovered from his injury, he could be a player. Kuany looks to have the athleticism and the size to rebound. One edge that Kelly and Anticevich have over Thorpe and Kuany is experience, a year for Kelly and two for Anticevich. But if they start, as you suggest, I think they have to improve their rebounding a whole lot for Cal to have a formidable rebounding front line. BTW, Thiemann looked like a tiger on the boards in the one video I saw, but he also looked like he could not play a lick of defense. Every player has deficiencies, especially incoming freshmen, and in that sense, we may well see Kelly and Anticevich get the early nod as starters, because they are veterans with a little experience.
I brought up Welle as a little attempt at humor, and I'm sorry you didn't get that. My larger point was that comparing Kelly's and Anticevich's rebound rates with the rest of their Cal teammates is not meaningful, unless you are trying to predict what they might do this year, except that the roster has now changed dramatically. There are new teammates whose rebounding rates are all unknown, except for South, a guard. Basketball is all about matchups at each position. (Don Nelson said that) A lot of the players last year were guards and wings, not bigs like Kelly and Grant.tsubamoto2001 said:
Pretty misleading to point out Welle as having the best rebounding rate on the team as he only played 4 minutes in 4 games the entire season. And grabbed 1 rebound in those 4 minutes. That's essentially the same as saying David Serge should start next season because he averaged 40 pts per 40 minutes based on the 3 garbage time minutes he played last season.
Rebound rate is more predictive with bigger sample sizes.SFCityBear said:I really like your optimism with respect to Kelly and Anticevich. They do have the height and bulk to become good rebounders. Rebounding can be taught to an extent. Blocking out can be taught. Athleticism can not be taught, maybe improved, but not learned. Anticipation comes with experience.tsubamoto2001 said:
Kelly and Anticevich had the best rebounding rates (save for Roman Davis, who played a lot less than both of them) on the team last season. For Kelly, he profiles as a center anyway, because of his girth at 260 lbs. He also seems to have decently long arms for his height. I don't think a front court with them is all that undersized in the college game these days.SFCityBear said:And if we start Kelly and Anticevich, we'll have the shortest lineup in the conference. To do what you suggest, I think Thorpe and Kuany might be the better bigs to give you some defense and rebounding. Kuany looks to me like he can run the floor, so I'd like to see him at SF some of the time in a bigger lineup. Much depends on whether the injured players, Jacobi and Thorpe, can give us good minutes. Still some holes, and a lot of questions, which makes it interesting. Biggest question in my mind is Fox. Can he coach? He is the key to the whole thing. I wonder if Brown or even South can move ahead of Austin. We need better point guard play at both ends. In any case, so many freshmen and sophs means we are not likely to be very good until they mature in a year or two.89Bear said:
I think that Bradley and South can rebound well for their position and size.
I wonder if we will see a lot of Bradley, South, and Austin together on the floor. All three have the ability to score and get up and down the court. Big guys then would need to be able to rebound and defend.
But looking at rebounding rates when compared to the rest of the Cal team is misleading, because last season, Cal was the worst or 2nd worst rebounding team out of 351 teams in the NCAA Division 1, depending on whose statistics you look at. Being among the best rebounders on an awful rebounding team does not say much. And if rebounding rate is a key stat, then maybe Fox should take a look at Blake Welle as a potential starter. His rebounding rate was better than Kelly, Anticevich, Davis, or Sueing (the team's best rebounder game after game).
In the eyeball test, I wondered all season why Kelly could not get more rebounds, with his size. He does not jump well, but still he got very few. I seldom saw him get one, and can't remember hardly any from Anticevich. Thorpe has the genes from his father, and I hope anticipation for rebounds was one of them, and if he has recovered from his injury, he could be a player. Kuany looks to have the athleticism and the size to rebound. One edge that Kelly and Anticevich have over Thorpe and Kuany is experience, a year for Kelly and two for Anticevich. But if they start, as you suggest, I think they have to improve their rebounding a whole lot for Cal to have a formidable rebounding front line. BTW, Thiemann looked like a tiger on the boards in the one video I saw, but he also looked like he could not play a lick of defense. Every player has deficiencies, especially incoming freshmen, and in that sense, we may well see Kelly and Anticevich get the early nod as starters, because they are veterans with a little experience.
Last season Kristine Anigwe averaged 18.7 per 40 minutes overall, 19.97 in conference games. I wonder if she has any brothers?Quote:
Looking at some former Cal players' rebounding rates:
Kinglsey Okoroh 8.6 (10.4 in 2016-17 season)
Marcus Lee 10.4
Ivan Rabb 12.4
David Kravish 9.3
Richard Solomon 12.4 (14.0 in 2014, a real stud on the glass that season)
Robert Thurman 8.4 in 2013
Jamal Boykin 9.6
Devon Hardin 11.7
Leon Powe 10.1 in 2006