Hyder to decide on Saturday

6,930 Views | 48 Replies | Last: 4 yr ago by HoopDreams
SFCityBear
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Dear Chapman,

The Forum quote feature of our posts has become so scrambled that I will try quoting you directly here.

"Many coaches are hired, in part, because they are virtually guaranteed to bring in a highly rated player(s) with them when they arrive due to an existing relationship, or they have extremely good relationships with local travel ball teams. Fox brought neither and actually lost a few players on the Cal team that were vital to keep."

I don't know of a single Cal coach who was hired for the reasons you suggested. Cuonzo had a relationship with Brown, but I doubt that Brown was "virtually guaranteed" to sign with Cal. Nor was Cuonzo virtually guaranteed to sign Rabb. There may be coaches who are hired in part for this reason, but I'd bet they aren't many. Obviously Fox likely had no relationship with local travel ball teams. And you don't know for certain that Fox lost a few of Wyking's players. Wyking may have lost them, or the losing atmosphere, or the lack of enthusiasm in Cal fans, or being at Cal itself, may have turned them off. They are kids not yet mature, and 40% of college players transfer. Unless you have inside information, you are just speculating on why they left. As to how vital they would be, that is debatable. maybe they would have helped, and maybe not as much as you think, while they occupied some 4 year scholarships.

"We've been down this road before, and it didn't go well. An "impact player" would be, by my definition, someone who makes a significantly greater contribution to the team than would a Pac-12 "replacement level" player. "Replacement level" is a baseball quant term with a precise definition and I don't know or care if it's used for basketball. A player should show clear upside from day 1 in practice and be a significant contributor to the team in games by his sophomore year."

What does that remark mean? Who is we? You and I, or others on the Forum? I think we mostly agree on what an impact player would be, except my standard might be slightly higher, in that I'd want an impact player to be more than a "significant contributor", and be a real difference maker for his team, that is the team is much better with him on the floor. Maybe we are saying the same thing. From the way you were writing, I assumed you were all in with those like Townie and maybe calumnus who want to focus one-and-dones, and you want them to play at a high level as freshmen, and that does not appear to be the case with you. Also, if you have been able to see recruits in day one of practice as freshmen, you have the advantage over me. Most fans don't get to watch practices, and that has been true for many years, maybe even prior to Ben Braun.

"Sigh. There is a strong positive correlation between recruiting rankings and eventual college success on the court. I am not open to the idea that that notion is incorrect. You just wrote that "not many" 4 or 5 star recruits are impacts players. I couldn't disagree more."

Here is where you stray from reality. I think you are just saying this because most every fan believes it. But you can only KNOW this if you look at actual facts, the careers of actual recruits. In 2016, I spent two weeks researching the top 100 ranked players of the 2009 class (I had to wait until all the players had used up their eligibility, and some took 5 or even 6 years to do it). I published it in the BI Forum as a spread sheet. The results were as follows:

60 players lived up to their ranking, in terms of their individual accomplishments in college.
34 of these 60 players helped the team which first signed them as recruits. I arbitrarily defined helping their team as at least any of the following: a 25-win season, a conference title, a sweet 16 appearance.
5 of those 34 players transferred and actually only helped their new team, not the team that signed them, which means that only 29 of those 60 players helped the team that first signed them.

31 of the top 100 players transferred to other schools.
26 players left early for the NBA. There were 10 one and done players, 6 two and done players, and 10 three and done players 9 of the 26 players who left early for the NBA, went undrafted.

12 players got injured, missed 6 seasons, and 2 had to retire from basketball. 6 players were arrested or suspended for rules violations, one player flunked out, and 4 players failed to academically qualify for admission.

The bottom line for 2009 was that you have a 60% chance that a player will look good playing for you, but only a 29% chance that one will really help your team. That means that 71% won't help your team to great success, and 40% of them won't even look good in your eyeball test. If that fits your definition of a "strong positive correlation," then we disagree only on how we describe things, either optimistically or realistically. The facts are the facts. It was one year. Other years may be different, better or worse. If you want to see the spreadsheet, I can e-mail it to you. Send me a PM.

Here is an article in a series by an NBA writer on the reliability of high school recruit rankings as a predictor of NBA success which looks at several years of data: https://medium.com/has-been-sports/revisionist-history-do-high-school-basketball-rankings-project-nba-success-5e2ab11e8847

"I have huge issues with the lists of players you presented. I'll take Brown, Bird, Hardin, Kately, Sampson, and Ubaka ALL DAY LONG and we'll run the current Cal squad, or your preferred squad of unheralded overachievers, out of the freaking gym. 99 times out of 100. The current Cal squad has a prominent player with a pear-shaped body -- the body shape that the Health Department typically shows as a indicator of obesity. I mean c'mon, I'm not making this **** up. Basketball players have to pass the eyeball test, and the current Cal squad does not."

Hey, we are both Cal fans. You have your favorites, I have mine. What is the problem? How is your team going to run any team out of the gym with Ubaka at point guard. He was the slowest point guard I've seen in many a year, and he won't be leading any fast breaks. For his first two years he dribbled around the perimeter and I nearly fell asleep watching him. To his great credit he became a much better shot and scorer in his last 2 years, but no speed burner. I'll take Jorge over Ubaka. Much better defender, and would eat Ayinde's lunch. I would also ask which Hardin and Bird are showing up for this game of yours? The guys in uniform ready to go, or the ones who too often were on the bench in street clothes, due to injuries? That is also part of how good a recruit is, whether he is durable and avoids injury.

Since you have a lot of height with Hardin and Sampson, I'll have to go with Anderson and Tamir up front, and we will outscore Hardin and Sampson by 20 points, so you will have to pick that up elsewhere. I'll take Lampley over Brown or Kately. None of them can make a 3, so it might be fun to watch. Sean would outscore either one, especially Kately. Your two guard is Bird, I guess, and I'll answer with Jerome Randle and Justin Cobbs, 6 against 6. It is no contest, Randle or Cobbs vs Bird, either of them the better player. If anyone's team is going to get run out of the gym, it is yours.

As for your team running last season's Cal team out of the gym, that Cal team was one of the worst teams in Cal history. So what is your point? I know one guy who would resent the asinine description of Andre Kelly's body. And if you were the coach of Louisville in 1964, you would not have signed Wes Unseld, 6-7, 250 lb center, for being too obese, and he averaged 36 points and 24 rebounds as a freshman, was later drafted by the Bullets and made the NBA Hall of Fame. Chamberlain said Unseld was one of the toughest players he ever played against. Don't judge a book by its cover.

"Yes, it's easy for you to cherry pick a list of 2 and 3 star recruits from the past 25 years who did well, all the while ignoring the overwhelming number of 2 and 3 star players who failed to lead Cal to the upper ranks of the Pac 10/12. This is called having your Alex Mack-tinted glasses on. You need to take yours off."

I'll take off my Alex Macks, if you will take off your Mary Poppins glasses. I never argued that 3-star or lower ranked or unranked players were more likely to be successful players at Cal, than 4 or 5-star players, only that many of them have been just that, so we should not overlook them when recruiting. Aren't you happy to have seen Randle, or Jorge, or Anderson, or Cobbs play for Cal?


Chapman_is_Gone
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Andre Kelly's not the one with the pear-shaped body. LOL. But now Kelly's gonna be looking for you
BearlyCareAnymore
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SFCityBear said:

Dear Chapman,

The Forum quote feature of our posts has become so scrambled that I will try quoting you directly here.

"Many coaches are hired, in part, because they are virtually guaranteed to bring in a highly rated player(s) with them when they arrive due to an existing relationship, or they have extremely good relationships with local travel ball teams. Fox brought neither and actually lost a few players on the Cal team that were vital to keep."

I don't know of a single Cal coach who was hired for the reasons you suggested. Cuonzo had a relationship with Brown, but I doubt that Brown was "virtually guaranteed" to sign with Cal. Nor was Cuonzo virtually guaranteed to sign Rabb. There may be coaches who are hired in part for this reason, but I'd bet they aren't many. Obviously Fox likely had no relationship with local travel ball teams. And you don't know for certain that Fox lost a few of Wyking's players. Wyking may have lost them, or the losing atmosphere, or the lack of enthusiasm in Cal fans, or being at Cal itself, may have turned them off. They are kids not yet mature, and 40% of college players transfer. Unless you have inside information, you are just speculating on why they left. As to how vital they would be, that is debatable. maybe they would have helped, and maybe not as much as you think, while they occupied some 4 year scholarships.

"We've been down this road before, and it didn't go well. An "impact player" would be, by my definition, someone who makes a significantly greater contribution to the team than would a Pac-12 "replacement level" player. "Replacement level" is a baseball quant term with a precise definition and I don't know or care if it's used for basketball. A player should show clear upside from day 1 in practice and be a significant contributor to the team in games by his sophomore year."

What does that remark mean? Who is we? You and I, or others on the Forum? I think we mostly agree on what an impact player would be, except my standard might be slightly higher, in that I'd want an impact player to be more than a "significant contributor", and be a real difference maker for his team, that is the team is much better with him on the floor. Maybe we are saying the same thing. From the way you were writing, I assumed you were all in with those like Townie and maybe calumnus who want to focus one-and-dones, and you want them to play at a high level as freshmen, and that does not appear to be the case with you. Also, if you have been able to see recruits in day one of practice as freshmen, you have the advantage over me. Most fans don't get to watch practices, and that has been true for many years, maybe even prior to Ben Braun.

"Sigh. There is a strong positive correlation between recruiting rankings and eventual college success on the court. I am not open to the idea that that notion is incorrect. You just wrote that "not many" 4 or 5 star recruits are impacts players. I couldn't disagree more."

Here is where you stray from reality. I think you are just saying this because most every fan believes it. But you can only KNOW this if you look at actual facts, the careers of actual recruits. In 2016, I spent two weeks researching the top 100 ranked players of the 2009 class (I had to wait until all the players had used up their eligibility, and some took 5 or even 6 years to do it). I published it in the BI Forum as a spread sheet. The results were as follows:

60 players lived up to their ranking, in terms of their individual accomplishments in college.
34 of these 60 players helped the team which first signed them as recruits. I arbitrarily defined helping their team as at least any of the following: a 25-win season, a conference title, a sweet 16 appearance.
5 of those 34 players transferred and actually only helped their new team, not the team that signed them, which means that only 29 of those 60 players helped the team that first signed them.

31 of the top 100 players transferred to other schools.
26 players left early for the NBA. There were 10 one and done players, 6 two and done players, and 10 three and done players 9 of the 26 players who left early for the NBA, went undrafted.

12 players got injured, missed 6 seasons, and 2 had to retire from basketball. 6 players were arrested or suspended for rules violations, one player flunked out, and 4 players failed to academically qualify for admission.

The bottom line for 2009 was that you have a 60% chance that a player will look good playing for you, but only a 29% chance that one will really help your team. That means that 71% won't help your team to great success, and 40% of them won't even look good in your eyeball test. If that fits your definition of a "strong positive correlation," then we disagree only on how we describe things, either optimistically or realistically. The facts are the facts. It was one year. Other years may be different, better or worse. If you want to see the spreadsheet, I can e-mail it to you. Send me a PM.

Here is an article in a series by an NBA writer on the reliability of high school recruit rankings as a predictor of NBA success which looks at several years of data: https://medium.com/has-been-sports/revisionist-history-do-high-school-basketball-rankings-project-nba-success-5e2ab11e8847

"I have huge issues with the lists of players you presented. I'll take Brown, Bird, Hardin, Kately, Sampson, and Ubaka ALL DAY LONG and we'll run the current Cal squad, or your preferred squad of unheralded overachievers, out of the freaking gym. 99 times out of 100. The current Cal squad has a prominent player with a pear-shaped body -- the body shape that the Health Department typically shows as a indicator of obesity. I mean c'mon, I'm not making this **** up. Basketball players have to pass the eyeball test, and the current Cal squad does not."

Hey, we are both Cal fans. You have your favorites, I have mine. What is the problem? How is your team going to run any team out of the gym with Ubaka at point guard. He was the slowest point guard I've seen in many a year, and he won't be leading any fast breaks. For his first two years he dribbled around the perimeter and I nearly fell asleep watching him. To his great credit he became a much better shot and scorer in his last 2 years, but no speed burner. I'll take Jorge over Ubaka. Much better defender, and would eat Ayinde's lunch. I would also ask which Hardin and Bird are showing up for this game of yours? The guys in uniform ready to go, or the ones who too often were on the bench in street clothes, due to injuries? That is also part of how good a recruit is, whether he is durable and avoids injury.

Since you have a lot of height with Hardin and Sampson, I'll have to go with Anderson and Tamir up front, and we will outscore Hardin and Sampson by 20 points, so you will have to pick that up elsewhere. I'll take Lampley over Brown or Kately. None of them can make a 3, so it might be fun to watch. Sean would outscore either one, especially Kately. Your two guard is Bird, I guess, and I'll answer with Jerome Randle and Justin Cobbs, 6 against 6. It is no contest, Randle or Cobbs vs Bird, either of them the better player. If anyone's team is going to get run out of the gym, it is yours.

As for your team running last season's Cal team out of the gym, that Cal team was one of the worst teams in Cal history. So what is your point? I know one guy who would resent the asinine description of Andre Kelly's body. And if you were the coach of Louisville in 1964, you would not have signed Wes Unseld, 6-7, 250 lb center, for being too obese, and he averaged 36 points and 24 rebounds as a freshman, was later drafted by the Bullets and made the NBA Hall of Fame. Chamberlain said Unseld was one of the toughest players he ever played against. Don't judge a book by its cover.

"Yes, it's easy for you to cherry pick a list of 2 and 3 star recruits from the past 25 years who did well, all the while ignoring the overwhelming number of 2 and 3 star players who failed to lead Cal to the upper ranks of the Pac 10/12. This is called having your Alex Mack-tinted glasses on. You need to take yours off."

I'll take off my Alex Macks, if you will take off your Mary Poppins glasses. I never argued that 3-star or lower ranked or unranked players were more likely to be successful players at Cal, than 4 or 5-star players, only that many of them have been just that, so we should not overlook them when recruiting. Aren't you happy to have seen Randle, or Jorge, or Anderson, or Cobbs play for Cal?



SF:

You can mark anything as a quote by highlighting it and clicking the button above that looks like a quote bubble. You should have at the top, below all the emoji's, a line of commands that has B I S and then the quote bubble. That way you can put anything in a quote box to keep it straight. Like

SFCity says:


Quote:

Go Bears!

BearlyCareAnymore
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Quote:

I think we mostly agree on what an impact player would be, except my standard might be slightly higher, in that I'd want an impact player to be more than a "significant contributor", and be a real difference maker for his team, that is the team is much better with him on the floor.
If that is your standard than you really need to re-evaluate your 2/3 star list. Legans never averaged double figures and averaged 3.7, 4.8 and 3.8 in assists, and frankly the first two years was with a lot of assists dumping the ball into Lampley and letting him do the work.

Rod Benson had one good year averaging 13 and 6. The other 3 years he averaged 0.8 and 0.8, 2.6 and 1.7, and 4.9 and 3.

Frankly, I'd argue that every guy but Domingo on your 4/5 list that you won't say are impact players was a difference maker on his team. I'd argue Brown was the best player on his team and was the guy other teams schemed against. Ubaka was the best player on the team his last year. Sampson was a defensive force that kept everyone out of the middle even if his offense was poor. Hardin was rough but a major factor on defense and especially on the boards. Bird was a consistent scorer and 3 point shooter.


Quote:

Here is where you stray from reality. I think you are just saying this because most every fan believes it. But you can only KNOW this if you look at actual facts, the careers of actual recruits. In 2016, I spent two weeks researching the top 100 ranked players of the 2009 class (I had to wait until all the players had used up their eligibility, and some took 5 or even 6 years to do it). I published it in the BI Forum as a spread sheet. The results were as follows:

60 players lived up to their ranking, in terms of their individual accomplishments in college.
34 of these 60 players helped the team which first signed them as recruits. I arbitrarily defined helping their team as at least any of the following: a 25-win season, a conference title, a sweet 16 appearance.
5 of those 34 players transferred and actually only helped their new team, not the team that signed them, which means that only 29 of those 60 players helped the team that first signed them.

31 of the top 100 players transferred to other schools.
26 players left early for the NBA. There were 10 one and done players, 6 two and done players, and 10 three and done players 9 of the 26 players who left early for the NBA, went undrafted.

12 players got injured, missed 6 seasons, and 2 had to retire from basketball. 6 players were arrested or suspended for rules violations, one player flunked out, and 4 players failed to academically qualify for admission.

The bottom line for 2009 was that you have a 60% chance that a player will look good playing for you, but only a 29% chance that one will really help your team. That means that 71% won't help your team to great success, and 40% of them won't even look good in your eyeball test. If that fits your definition of a "strong positive correlation," then we disagree only on how we describe things, either optimistically or realistically. The facts are the facts. It was one year. Other years may be different, better or worse. If you want to see the spreadsheet, I can e-mail it to you. Send me a PM.
To this I'm just going to say, Sigh we've been down this road before.

Several people have pointed out the massive problems with your methodology and the conclusions you have drawn. I just don't have the strength to do it again. Your conclusions were completely absurd. How you cannot understand the faults in your methodology when people have pointed them out very clearly I do not get.

Now in the past, you have said something along the lines that your analysis was not meant to prove that 3 stars are as good as 4 stars but to show that 4 stars are no guarantee of team success. Except the problem with that is 1. No one ever claimed it was a guarantee; 2. Your standard for team success was unreasonable, and 3. Most importantly, you always post it in response to someone saying that recruiting rankings do correlate to success. As you did here.

Chap said:

Quote:


Sigh. There is a strong positive correlation between recruiting rankings and eventual college success on the court. I am not open to the idea that that notion is incorrect. You just wrote that "not many" 4 or 5 star recruits are impacts players. I couldn't disagree more.

You responded with


Quote:

Here is where you stray from reality. I think you are just saying this because most every fan believes it. But you can only KNOW this if you look at actual facts, the careers of actual recruits.


So you were AGAIN not using your "study" to demonstrate lack of team success, but were again refuting the notion that recruiting rankings correlated to impact players. And throwing n a dig that everyone who disagrees with you strays from reality.

By your own words:


Quote:

60 players lived up to their ranking
So what the hell?

Further. In terms of TEAM success, the way you judge if recruiting rankings correlate to team success is not by some arbitrary number being "not very high". It is by comparing the team success of teams with highly ranked recruits to teams with lower ranked recruits. I did this for you before demonstrating using your figures that the team success for teams WITHOUT top 100 players in the 2009 class had a much, much lower "chance that one will really help your team" than 29%. MUCH LOWER. I'm not doing it again. You responded to me that my analysis was not what you were trying to prove. Yet, here you go again using your analysis to refute the exact same point. That recruiting rankings correlate to success. 329,999,999 million Americans understand this to be true.


Quote:

I'll take Jorge over Ubaka. Much better defender, and would eat Ayinde's lunch.

Again, insulting a great bear and local kid to win an argument. Add Ayinde to the list of Bears you should apologize to since you never apologized to Ivan Rabb for claiming he threw his teammates under the bus.

I'd take Jorge also, but their careers and especially last two years are very similar. There is no way Jorge "eats his lunch". It would be a very good matchup.


Quote:

I would also ask which Hardin and Bird are showing up for this game of yours? The guys in uniform ready to go, or the ones who too often were on the bench in street clothes, due to injuries?

Hardin had a significant injury one year and only played 11 games that year. Otherwise, he played 29, 31, and 30 games. Bird played 31, 23, 33, and 27. You want to check against some of the guys on your list. Rod Benson played 86 games in 4 years. Bird played 114. Midgley played 115 for Cal. Legans played less than 100.


Quote:

Since you have a lot of height with Hardin and Sampson, I'll have to go with Anderson and Tamir up front, and we will outscore Hardin and Sampson by 20 points, so you will have to pick that up elsewhere.
Sorry, you don't get Anderson. He was a 4 star as shown by this composite ranking:


Quote:

http://www.espn.com/college-sports/basketball/recruiting/player/_/id/72977/ryan-anderson


247 composite ranking:

Quote:


https://247sports.com/player/ryan-anderson-64662/

Quote:

247 composite methodology

247Sports Composite
The 247Sports Composite Rating is a proprietary algorithm that compiles prospect "rankings" and "ratings" listed in the public domain by the major media recruiting services. It converts average industry ranks and ratings into a linear composite index capping at 1.0000, which indicates a consensus No. 1 prospect across all services.
The 247Sports Composite Rating is the industry's most comprehensive and unbiased prospect ranking and is also used to generate 247Sports Team Recruiting Rankings.
All major media services share an equal percentage in the 247Sports Composite Rating.
The composite index equally weights this percentage among the services that participate in a ranking for that specific prospect.
All industry services have a different philosophy on number of "stars" distributed with each class. The 247Sports Composite Rating assigns stars based on an approximate average distribution of stars from the industry.


I'll give you Tamir but begrudgingly. He was a foreign player who came out late in the process and the recruiting services barely saw him. We celebrated like we got a 4 star wen we got him.

And as usual, you fail to see that the problem with your analysis is that you don't make the list of 2/3 stars who were not impact players as you define them over the same time period. Like so:

Austin
South
Harris-Dyson
Gordon
McNeil
Davis
Sueing
Vanover
McCullogh
Coleman
Okoroh
Winston
Singer
Moute a Bidias
Chauca
Moore
Rooks
Behrens
Tarwater
Kreklow
Kreklow
Kreklow
Did I mention Kreklow? Who apparently was never hurt, didn't eat up 3 years of scholies playing 33 games and averaging 4 points and didn't at all throw his teammates under the bus by getting 3 years of development on our dime with almost no contribution and transferring when we actually needed him, but hell lets take shots at Ivan Rabb and Ayinde Ubaka because they don't dive flop around the floor like a fish out of water like your hero Ricky Kreklow.
Bak
Rodriguez
Solomon
Murray
Rossi
Knezevic
Zhang
Amoke
Wilkes
Other Wilkes
Vierniesel
Benson (No way he was an impact player)
Legans (No way he was an impact player)
Vander Laan
King
Hughes
other Hughes
Kuzminskas
Bond
Paris
Geli

I don't know about Chapman's challenge, but give me the 10 worst guys on your list of 4/5 stars and I'll give you the 10 worst guys off my list of 2/3 stars and I'll win 100 out of 100 times.
Quote:


I'll take off my Alex Macks, if you will take off your Mary Poppins glasses. I never argued that 3-star or lower ranked or unranked players were more likely to be successful players at Cal, than 4 or 5-star players, only that many of them have been just that, so we should not overlook them when recruiting. Aren't you happy to have seen Randle, or Jorge, or Anderson, or Cobbs play for Cal?

1. Well that is a flat out lie

2. So then what is your point!!!!!?????? That some lower level recruits turn out good? That some higher level recruits turn out bad? Thanks Captain Obvious.

If you are going to accuse people of straying from reality, try getting somewhere in the zip code yourself.





calumnus
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oskidunker said:

Legans has said he made a mistake leaving Cal.


Legans left Cal to go to play under his mentor at Fresno State in order to begin a coaching career. He is currently the head coach at Eastern Washington making $130,000 with a chance to move up into the really big money so It seems to have worked.
TheSouseFamily
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Fox is still checking out point guards. Like Hyder, Francis has 3 to play, but is a true point guard. Long injury going back to high school (form ACL) and got hurt again at UNC again this year. But he still started a couple of games for UNC. If healthy, could be an excellent addition. Further to the other exchanges, the fact we're still checking in on pure point guards like Francis and Nelson tells me he wasn't recruiting Hyder to play point.

Civil Bear
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calumnus said:

oskidunker said:

Legans has said he made a mistake leaving Cal.


Legans left Cal to go to play under his mentor at Fresno State in order to begin a coaching career. He is currently the head coach at Eastern Washington making $130,000 with a chance to move up into the really big money so It seems to have worked.
It's true Legans said he wanted to join his uncle at FSU, but I don't recall him ever mentioning anything about beginning a coaching career. However, we do know that he and his mom weren't happy with his playing time.
Civil Bear
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TheSouseFamily said:

Fox is still checking out point guards. Like Hyder, Francis has 3 to play, but is a true point guard. Long injury going back to high school (form ACL) and got hurt again at UNC again this year. But he still started a couple of games for UNC. If healthy, could be an excellent addition. Further to the other exchanges, the fact we're still checking in on pure point guards like Francis and Nelson tells me he wasn't recruiting Hyder to play point.


Or, since Francis is a late addition to the portal, perhaps Fox thinks he might be an upgrade at pg.
SFCityBear
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Chapman_is_Gone said:

Andre Kelly's not the one with the pear-shaped body. LOL. But now Kelly's gonna be looking for you
Well, don't keep us in suspense. Who's your pear? Thorpe? Bradley? Don't give us Lars, because he is 7-0 and 248, while Wilt Chamberlain was 7-1 and 250 as an NBA rookie, and nobody said he was obese. And Lars is often the first guy to get down the floor on defense when the ball changes hands, and you can't usually do that if you are obese. The object of my statement was not to help you call a player out, but to call you out for making such a mean-spirited obnoxious comment about a Cal player, any Cal player, who busts his butt to make this team better, for your entertainment.
ducky23
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The one thing I remember about legans was that he would ice games at the FT line like no other cal player I'd seen before.

The only other comparable player I can think of is randle who was money as well.
SFCityBear
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ducky23 said:

The one thing I remember about legans was that he would ice games at the FT line like no other cal player I'd seen before.

The only other comparable player I can think of is randle who was money as well.
You are right about Legans and Randle. I'd add Ubaka. In has last two seasons, he never missed a FT in close games in the final minute as I remember.
KoreAmBear
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SFCityBear said:

ducky23 said:

The one thing I remember about legans was that he would ice games at the FT line like no other cal player I'd seen before.

The only other comparable player I can think of is randle who was money as well.
You are right about Legans and Randle. I'd add Ubaka. In has last two seasons, he never missed a FT in close games in the final minute as I remember.
Cobbs was very good in crunch time as well.
SFCityBear
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KoreAmBear said:

SFCityBear said:

ducky23 said:

The one thing I remember about legans was that he would ice games at the FT line like no other cal player I'd seen before.

The only other comparable player I can think of is randle who was money as well.
You are right about Legans and Randle. I'd add Ubaka. In has last two seasons, he never missed a FT in close games in the final minute as I remember.
Cobbs was very good in crunch time as well.
Good point.
rkt88edmo
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SFCityBear said:

ducky23 said:

The one thing I remember about legans was that he would ice games at the FT line like no other cal player I'd seen before.

The only other comparable player I can think of is randle who was money as well.
You are right about Legans and Randle. I'd add Ubaka. In has last two seasons, he never missed a FT in close games in the final minute as I remember.
All good or great shooters who were extremely effective when they weren't at a deficit due to height.
HoopDreams
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KoreAmBear said:

SFCityBear said:

ducky23 said:

The one thing I remember about legans was that he would ice games at the FT line like no other cal player I'd seen before.

The only other comparable player I can think of is randle who was money as well.
You are right about Legans and Randle. I'd add Ubaka. In has last two seasons, he never missed a FT in close games in the final minute as I remember.
Cobbs was very good in crunch time as well.
and Jorge
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