Growler91 said:
I like this guy. In addition to PG depth, we now have two really good 3-ball shooters to go with Bradley. Fox's recruiting moves have been solid and logical and I bet this team takes a significant positive step next season.
SFCitybear, Paris Austin averaged 2.5 assists a game last season. SMH.SFCityBear said:
And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that.
As for understanding the move, I think it boils down to what is the best one year player you can get since it doesn't hurt you to fill a slot. I assume this is the best one year player we have available to us at this point. I don't disagree with you about what we should be looking for. I'm just guessing that if we were able to find it, we would have brought that player in.SFCityBear said:
While I welcome any player who comes to Cal, and will root for him as long as he is trying hard on the court, I'm not sure I understand this move. The headline bills Foreman as a point guard, but he is primarily a perimeter shooter, from what I could find out. His assists are not impressive, only 2 per game. And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that. Hyder is young, only a soph, and maybe he can do that, but again, his 3 assists per game were in a lower level of competition at Fresno. Cal needed better perimeter shooting last season, but the bigger needs were in the front line, at center, and small forward particularly, and at point guard, especially with Austin graduating. Bradley is playing a small forward, and at 6-4, he is too small to play up front against often bigger opponents. He is fine up front when Fox goes small, but I'd rather see him as the 2 guard against most teams.
Foreman is another transfer who shot well for teams who played in conferences who were not anywhere near the level of the PAC12 even in down years. We all saw what happened with Kareem South, whose perimeter shooting fell way off for Cal from what it was at Corpus Christi, when he jumped up a few notches to play in the PAC12. If you are bringing in a transfer for perimeter shooting, I'd rather be looking for another Grant Mullins, someone from a league not as far below the PAC12, and 40% or better three point shooter. 36% is not great three-point shooting - it is just average for D1. Foreman looks good in a mixtape, and I am pleased that he has a mid-range shot as well as a three, and nice pull up jumper. Let's hope hope he gives us some good defense.
As to Cal making a positive step forward this season, I'm guardedly optimistic, because for Cal to be more than marginally better, not only will the recruits and transfers have to be as good as advertised, but many of the veterans will have to improve a bunch, and they will have missed a lot of practice time with the shutdown response to the Corona virus. The same is true for all teams and players.
36% was actually pretty impressive considering the degree of difficulty on those off-the-dribble bombs shown in his highlight tape. I'm guessing he could get much closer to 40% with a little more selectivity.SFCityBear said:
Foreman is another transfer who shot well for teams who played in conferences who were not anywhere near the level of the PAC12 even in down years. We all saw what happened with Kareem South, whose perimeter shooting fell way off for Cal from what it was at Corpus Christi, when he jumped up a few notches to play in the PAC12. If you are bringing in a transfer for perimeter shooting, I'd rather be looking for another Grant Mullins, someone from a league not as far below the PAC12, and 40% or better three point shooter. 36% is not great three-point shooting - it is just average for D1. Foreman looks good in a mixtape, and I am pleased that he has a mid-range shot as well as a three, and nice pull up jumper. Let's hope hope he gives us some good defense.
Growler91 said:SFCitybear, Paris Austin averaged 2.5 assists a game last season. SMH.SFCityBear said:
And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that.
I am aware of that. I did not say "AVERAGE 4-5 assists". I said "CAN GET 4-5 assists", which means "able to get" or "capable of getting" 4 or 5 assists. He had seven games last season where he got 4 assists or more, including 5 PAC12 games, and his best games for assists were 5 vs ASU and OSU. Austin was hurt during the preseason and also was in competition with Brown for minutes during all of the preseason, and only after several conference games did he begin to average his usual number of minutes, 35 or so, as he had done the year before. I don't know how much injury affected his play last season.Growler91 said:SFCitybear, Paris Austin averaged 2.5 assists a game last season. SMH.SFCityBear said:
And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that.
At this stage in a grad transfer? I'd like the moon with a fence around it.SFCityBear said:What I'd like to see Cal get is a point guard who can average 5-6 assists, and be capable of getting 10 assists.Growler91 said:SFCitybear, Paris Austin averaged 2.5 assists a game last season. SMH.SFCityBear said:
And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that.
The year we went 8-23? Are you kidding me?Big C said:Growler91 said:SFCitybear, Paris Austin averaged 2.5 assists a game last season. SMH.SFCityBear said:
And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that.
Good point, but I think Austin averaged something more like 4 assists his junior season, playing under Wyking Jones' looser reins.
Of course not, obviously.Growler91 said:At this stage in a grad transfer? I'd like the moon with a fence around it.SFCityBear said:What I'd like to see Cal get is a point guard who can average 5-6 assists, and be capable of getting 10 assists.Growler91 said:SFCitybear, Paris Austin averaged 2.5 assists a game last season. SMH.SFCityBear said:
And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that.
SFCityBear said:
While I welcome any player who comes to Cal, and will root for him as long as he is trying hard on the court, I'm not sure I understand this move. The headline bills Foreman as a point guard, but he is primarily a perimeter shooter, from what I could find out. His assists are not impressive, only 2 per game. And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that. Hyder is young, only a soph, and maybe he can do that, but again, his 3 assists per game were in a lower level of competition at Fresno. Cal needed better perimeter shooting last season, but the bigger needs were in the front line, at center, and small forward particularly, and at point guard, especially with Austin graduating. Bradley is playing a small forward, and at 6-4, he is too small to play up front against often bigger opponents. He is fine up front when Fox goes small, but I'd rather see him as the 2 guard against most teams.
Foreman is another transfer who shot well for teams who played in conferences who were not anywhere near the level of the PAC12 even in down years. We all saw what happened with Kareem South, whose perimeter shooting fell way off for Cal from what it was at Corpus Christi, when he jumped up a few notches to play in the PAC12. If you are bringing in a transfer for perimeter shooting, I'd rather be looking for another Grant Mullins, someone from a league not as far below the PAC12, and 40% or better three point shooter. 36% is not great three-point shooting - it is just average for D1. Foreman looks good in a mixtape, and I am pleased that he has a mid-range shot as well as a three, and nice pull up jumper. Let's hope hope he gives us some good defense.
As to Cal making a positive step forward this season, I'm guardedly optimistic, because for Cal to be more than marginally better, not only will the recruits and transfers have to be as good as advertised, but many of the veterans will have to improve a bunch, and they will have missed a lot of practice time with the shutdown response to the Corona virus. The same is true for all teams and players.
Betley is From Penn is Ivy League same league Mullins came from.
Growler91 said:The year we went 8-23? Are you kidding me?Big C said:Growler91 said:SFCitybear, Paris Austin averaged 2.5 assists a game last season. SMH.SFCityBear said:
And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that.
Good point, but I think Austin averaged something more like 4 assists his junior season, playing under Wyking Jones' looser reins.
You talked about Foreman's 2 and Hyder's 3 assists per game, so of course you meant you wanted 4-5 assists per game. And even if you didn't mean per game (i.e. average), then what makes you think they wouldn't get 4 or 5 on a given night? Do you think Hyder got exactly 3 assists in every game?SFCityBear said:I am aware of that. I did not say "AVERAGE 4-5 assists". I said "CAN GET 4-5 assists", which means "able to get" or "capable of getting" 4 or 5 assists. He had seven games last season where he got 4 assists or more, including 5 PAC12 games, and his best games for assists were 5 vs ASU and OSU. Austin was hurt during the preseason and also was in competition with Brown for minutes during all of the preseason, and only after several conference games did he begin to average his usual number of minutes, 35 or so, as he had done the year before. I don't know how much injury affected his play last season.Growler91 said:SFCitybear, Paris Austin averaged 2.5 assists a game last season. SMH.SFCityBear said:
And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that.
It looks from the vid that he can get that shot off any time he likes. The question is what percentage of those types actually went in. I'm guessing not near 36%.Matthew Patel said:Not really sure how to feel about this guy, but shooting ability always translates. But how easily can he get open and get that shot off without help? I guess we'll find out.philbert said:
And the point is? I like Betley, and he was a 40% or close to that 3-point shooter in his first 2 seasons. He was injured for most of his 3rd season, and last year he may have been banged up as well, since he missed 5 games and played only a handful of minutes in some others. Plus he brings some rebounding to the table, which Cal needs. Whether he can do it against Pac-12 opponents is the question, as it is with all the transfers from lesser leagues. I don't follow other leagues as much, but I think the Ivy League might be a stronger conference than the AEC or the Southern conferences where Foreman has had his experience, and it may not be as strong a conference as the MWC, where Hyder had his experience. I'm no expert on how strong each of the current conferences is - I'd have to check with someone like Tsubamoto for that, or maybe you know.oskidunker said:SFCityBear said:
While I welcome any player who comes to Cal, and will root for him as long as he is trying hard on the court, I'm not sure I understand this move. The headline bills Foreman as a point guard, but he is primarily a perimeter shooter, from what I could find out. His assists are not impressive, only 2 per game. And what Cal needs is a point guard who can get 4-5 assists just to replace Paris Austin in the lineup, without looking to improve. Brown has not shown yet that he can do that. Hyder is young, only a soph, and maybe he can do that, but again, his 3 assists per game were in a lower level of competition at Fresno. Cal needed better perimeter shooting last season, but the bigger needs were in the front line, at center, and small forward particularly, and at point guard, especially with Austin graduating. Bradley is playing a small forward, and at 6-4, he is too small to play up front against often bigger opponents. He is fine up front when Fox goes small, but I'd rather see him as the 2 guard against most teams.
Foreman is another transfer who shot well for teams who played in conferences who were not anywhere near the level of the PAC12 even in down years. We all saw what happened with Kareem South, whose perimeter shooting fell way off for Cal from what it was at Corpus Christi, when he jumped up a few notches to play in the PAC12. If you are bringing in a transfer for perimeter shooting, I'd rather be looking for another Grant Mullins, someone from a league not as far below the PAC12, and 40% or better three point shooter. 36% is not great three-point shooting - it is just average for D1. Foreman looks good in a mixtape, and I am pleased that he has a mid-range shot as well as a three, and nice pull up jumper. Let's hope hope he gives us some good defense.
As to Cal making a positive step forward this season, I'm guardedly optimistic, because for Cal to be more than marginally better, not only will the recruits and transfers have to be as good as advertised, but many of the veterans will have to improve a bunch, and they will have missed a lot of practice time with the shutdown response to the Corona virus. The same is true for all teams and players.
Betley is From Penn is Ivy League same league Mullins came from.
Not very tall and not very athletic so probably struggles to finish and perhaps not good in the midrange. I looked up his stats and 2/3 of his shots were 3s, so between 37% and 38% on 2s. However, Cal was desperate for a third ball-handler and he clearly can shoot from distance, so I am more excited about what he can do than disappointed about what he can't.mdbear said:
I am a little perplexed by Foreman's stats last year. How does a guard who shoots 85% from the free throw line and 36% on 3 pointers only shoot 36.5% from the field. Can anyone with more knowledge of his season explain?
Cal has little offensive structure. We may look a little better than in 2019, but our offensive results were not as good. You want shooters, I gather. Fine. But who gives them the ball to shoot? I saw very few guys working to get open in the Cal offense. In fact, I haven's seen this very much since Montgomery was at Cal. The reason Cal was more competitive under Fox than under Jones was simply that he got Cal to play defense a little better. But defense has its limits. At some point you have to start making baskets at a high rate. That means taking more high percentage shots, and more of them, not just depending on your athletes to all be good enough to shake their defenders and work their way open for a look at the basket.Growler91 said:
Love Paris Austin. No disrespect to what he did as a junior, but that's not relevant at all anymore. We are not replacing 4-5 assists a game. This guy is a totally different player.
mdbear said:
I am a little perplexed by Foreman's stats last year. How does a guard who shoots 85% from the free throw line and 36% on 3 pointers only shoot 36.5% from the field. Can anyone with more knowledge of his season explain?
I don't think I understand the Midgely comparison. His field goal percentage declined every year from 47% as a freshman to 38.5% as a senior. He also shot better from the field than 3 point range in all but his senior year. Foreman's shooting percentage improved from freshman to sophomore year but then regressed in his junior year.calumnus said:mdbear said:
I am a little perplexed by Foreman's stats last year. How does a guard who shoots 85% from the free throw line and 36% on 3 pointers only shoot 36.5% from the field. Can anyone with more knowledge of his season explain?
Richard Midgley
https://tv5.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/player/stats/_/id/11284/richard-midgley
Can bring the ball up and initiate the offense. Likes having the ball in his hands. Not good at driving to the hoop and/or driving and dishing for assists. Sweet shot with deep range. Can't have too many of those guys. Some guys should pretty much always shoot from 3, a much better percentage/payoff shot. That is fine, it opens up the court for others.
Honestly, he is a solid pick up at this point. I think he will he fun to root for. It is the guy we use his scholarship to bring in next year that will make the difference in the program.
sluggo said:Not very tall and not very athletic so probably struggles to finish and perhaps not good in the midrange. I looked up his stats and 2/3 of his shots were 3s, so between 37% and 38% on 2s. However, Cal was desperate for a third ball-handler and he clearly can shoot from distance, so I am more excited about what he can do than disappointed about what he can't.mdbear said:
I am a little perplexed by Foreman's stats last year. How does a guard who shoots 85% from the free throw line and 36% on 3 pointers only shoot 36.5% from the field. Can anyone with more knowledge of his season explain?
Sluggo