Cyrus B. Goode said:
OaktownBear said:
I'll say this again. My main issue is those that do not seem to want any standard at all this year. I recognize the difficult job Fox walked into. I'm not saying we should be going to a tournament this year. I am saying you can tell when things are moving in a positive direction. This team needs to show some improvement. We need to keep our key players from transferring. I know some people don't like talking about odds of recruits at a certain level succeeding, but I'll say again, our best recruit is our best player and neither the freshmen or the next class are rated close to him. That needs to change and if it doesn't it is fair of detractors to say the talent level is not likely to get us to the next level as a team. He absolutely may surprise me. My issue is that there are others that have set zero standard. It is not possible for him to do anything to surprise them in the negative because they are literally expecting nothing from him.
My simple response is this. Did Steve Kerr get really dumb in a year or did he lose nearly all of his top talent to injury or departure?
Subsequent to Fox's hire, three players transferred. Those slots have been filled, but not by guys that are as good as the ones who left. Therefore, there is a serious talent shortage on this year's team.
Additionally, the first recruiting class looks uninspiring, to say the least right now.
I do want to see improvement from the existing players, whatever their talent level, but we probably won't know how extensive that was until the end of the year.
I don't agree, mostly. First of all, isn't it unfair to any coach to be held to a standard that freshman recruits should be as good as the players who transferred, who are all one or two years more experienced than incoming freshmen? Only Kareem South is an experienced player, among the incoming recruits.
Secondly, what do you mean by the word" slots?" If you mean slots in the rotation, well, from what little I have seen, South looks like a better all-around player than McNeill, whom he is replacing, Bradley is a better all-around player than Sueing, and a much better outside shot than Sueing, and Anticevich is a better player than Vanover, in most ways, except shot blocking. If you are talking about slots in a roster, again I would say South is better than McNeill, and I would say that Thiemann and Vanover are at least even, for their freshman non-conference schedules. Thiemann and Vanover scored about the same level,with Thiemann a post player and Vanover a perimeter shooter. Thiemann has the better frame for basketball, and I believe has more potential. They both score and rebound at a similar level, and I would give Thiemann a slight edge on defense. Vanover was an open invitation for any opponent to score. He could stop no one If he can't devleop a D1 body, I have less hope for him to improve much. I think the team misses Sueing's consistent scoring, but he improved little in 2 years. He has no right hand. He can not drive right, dribble right, shoot right, pass right. He could have helped this team in the short but not long term.
If Joel Brown is one you were thinking of, his defense is pretty good. He is athletic and has very good speed. He just can't shoot well. And he does not seem to distribute well. Very raw, and who knows if he can improve. This is unfortunate, because Austin is performing at a level well below his play last season. He has been injured, and also seems to be having trouble adjusting to Fox's offense. The ideal thing would have had him as good as he was last year, so he could play major minutes, and bring Brown along slowly, but the reality is they both are playing, neither one very well.
The place where we lack sufficient depth is the forward spots, and Kuany and Thorpe may still be recovering from injuries, and have missed games and lots of practice time, so it could be hard predicting how well they can play or whether they can improve, and when.