I agree with much of this talk about young Lars, but I think we are piling on a bit much, and it started with his very first game. It seems as time goes by, that we Cal fans get more and more critical of our players. Is it the years of no success in the NCAA, or teams just not winning enough games for us?
Now we have taken to piling criticism on a young 7-footer from Germany for not being what we expected, I guess. What did you expect? He is an unranked player. He did not splash on the recruiting scene with the glowing reviews of a Dirk Nowitski when Ben Braun tried to sign the great future pro player. Lars was basically unknown compared to Nowitski. If he was known, and if he was matured basketball-wise beyond his years, the Gonzagas, or Arizonas or Utahs of the world would have snapped him up like an anteater scoops up an ant.
I and someone else here at least have said Lars as a freshman is ahead of Darrall Imhoff as a freshman. That means little to fans who never saw the great Darrall, who wasn't so great when he arrived at Cal. He was a gangly klutz, to put it mildly. With coaching and playing, he became a star, and he made the Cal team a star, making those around him better. Maybe I wasn't listening but I don't remember near as much criticism of Rooks and Okoroh by fans, compared to what I am reading here about Lars. They were both slow, clumsy, awkward. They hardly ever dunked a ball, maybe none at all as freshmen, and yet we posters are quick to criticize Lars for missing a shot against USF that, had he more experience, might have gone up hard and dunked it. It was not that he COULD NOT dunk the ball, as one poster said, but that he DID NOT dunk it. He needs to play more and begin to feel what is the right shot for the occasion. If he has been here a year or two and does not dunk that shot, the criticism is amply justified, but not as a freshman in his 8th college game. He has to come to understand that inside that contemptible (for me) little semi-circle painted on the floor, he can't get called for a charge, so just go ahead and take it hard to the rim, no matter who you crash into.
Imhoff was ineligible as a freshman. Here is the sophomore Imhoff vs the freshman Lars, per game:
FG%: Lars .522, Imhoff .353
FT%: Lars .438, Imhoff .400
Rebounds: Lars 2.3, Imhoff 1.4
Points: Lars 3.9, Imhoff 0.9
Frosh Lars vs frosh Solomon Hughes, per game:
FG%: Hughes .524, Lars .522
FT%: Lars .438, Hughes .231
Rebounds: Hughes 2.4, Lars 2.3
Points: Lars 3.9, Hughes 3.3
Frosh Lars vs frosh Rooks and frosh Okoroh, per 40 minutes:
FG%: Lars .522, Okoroh .462, Rooks .429
FT%: Rooks .529, Okoroh .522, Lars .438
Rebounds: Rooks 9.0, Okoroh 6.7, Lars 5.3
Blocks: Okoroh 2.8, Rooks 2.2, Lars 1.8
Turnovers: Rooks 1.3 Okoroh, 2.1, Lars 2.1
Personal Fouls: Lars 5.3, Okoroh 6.0, Rooks 6.8
Points: Lars 9.2, Rooks 7.3, Okoroh 6.1
I did this exercise to show that the freshman Lars, statistically speaking, compares favorably to some Cal centers as freshmen. I don't remember as much critical commentary about Rooks and Okoroh after 8 games, as I am reading here. I do remember fans worried about how Imhoff would be able to fill the shoes of the great Don McIntosh, who had graduated. And I never heard anything negative about Hughes as a freshman.
The stats point out some of the areas I am most concerned with for Lars: Rebounds and free throws. He is not doing much of a job on defense yet, although he seems better man to man than his first game. He was overplaying Jimbo, and got burned several times, but I'd bet he was overplaying him on instructions from the coach, or the coach would have told him to play Jimbo another way when the overplay wasn't working. I like Lars' free throw stroke, and I expect his free throws will improve. Kingsley Okoroh had one of the worst looking free throw strokes, and I can't believe Lars won't become a better shooter than KO was from the line. He has got to make those free throws, or once he begins to score more points, teams will foul him as a smart strategy.