91Cal said:
Chunger89 said:
I was looking at Arizona's recruiting class for this year and was surprised at how Miller was able to pull in six highly rated international players (Canada, Turkey, France, and three from Lithuania). Obviously Arizona has a draw from a basketball standpoint, but I remember how we were recruiting players like Poetl, Sarr, Yurtseven in years past. I know Fox is open to recruiting international players (Lars, Klonaras, etc) but what separates us from finding these other gems and would/should we focus on recruiting more of these players in the future? I look at a program who has thrived with this model, being Gonzaga who has at least a third of their roster with foreign students who they've developed into high round picks (Sabonis, Hachimura, Tillie, Petrusev, Ayayi). We should be able to pitch our university given the diverse student body and draw of the Bay Area demographic.
As well, our much smaller neighbor St. Mary's has had a continual pipeline, particularly from Australia.
The appeal of schools like St. Mary's, Gonzaga, Arizona, etc. is completely different.
Until we are in the dance consistently, and consistently making it to the second weekend, hard to expect us to be able to attract the NBA level talent.
If you want NBA level talent, then you must back that up with class after class after class of NBA level talent, and that is very hard to do when you are starting at the bottom, the basement of Division One college basketball. The signing of NBA level talents Brown and Rabb, combined with their leaving after one year and two years, combined with Cuonzo leaving Cal for a ton of money, and further combined with the disaster of hiring a coach like Wyking Jones, without an iota of head coaching experience at any level, is what sent us directly to the trash bin, only a few years after we had won the PAC10 Championship. But it all started with the signing of one and dones. I'm glad I saw Brown and Rabb play for Cal, but in the end their time here was wasted, as far as program success was concerned, IMO
First, once you sign NBA level talent, you must begin figuring out what to do after next season, when they leave. Cuonzo must have known this, and he must have tried to find bodies of equal ability, but he basically came up empty, and then he left. It is so hard to win these recruiting battles for the stars. But you must keep winning them, or you will fail to sustain success. I much prefer the 3 or 4 year player, maybe not quite NBA level, maybe like Fox's Yante Maten at Georgia. Solid 4-year player, SEC POY. Put say, 3 of those guys on the floor with 2 players who work well with them, and you might have something. And you won't have to win as many recruiting battles the NBA level players.
I wonder why we pay so much attention to Sean Miller. Montgomery didn't worry about him too much. He beat him 3 times out of 8, with far less talented players overall. Miller has yet to reach a Final Four at Arizona. His ceiling appears to be losing in the Regional Final, which he has done twice. He is in the middle of the latest recruiting scandal, so you know what he has had to do to recruit his players. Why not rather ask Lute Olson the formula for success? At Arizona for 24 years, Lute went to the Final Four 4 times, lost twice in the semi-final, lost once in the final, and won the Championship in 1997. He went to 6 Regional Finals and won 4 of them. He went to 10 Regional Semi-finals and won 6 of them. Like Miller, he also had loads of NBA level talent. The difference was that on all his best NCAA tournament teams, he did it with nearly all 4-year players. Of those tournament teams only Mike Bibby and Gilbert Arenas left for the NBA after 2 years, and Will Bynum transferred after 2 years. Wright and Richard Jefferson left for the NBA after 3 years. The rest of Olson's players in these tournament games who eventually played in the NBA stayed at Arizona for 4 years.
Basketball is not plug and play. The value of having mostly the same rotation intact, playing for one coach for 3 or 4 years is immeasurable. We can't just lose a 5 star player to the NBA, and expect to replace him with equal talent, and even if the new freshman is equal or better talent, there is no guarantee or probability he will mesh and have chemistry with his new teammates, resulting in team success. Better to have players who will stick around for 3 or 4 years, playing for one coach in one system. Maybe with the rules and the attraction of the NBA now, maybe it can't be done any more. If not, that is tragic.