Of course your opinion is worth something, to me at least. Especially if you have seen someone play. And if you have seen him play up close, or for several games, then it is worth even more. If you mean that you saw him play in a highlight film, well, you can evaluate a little from that, but not very much. Highlight films are just that, highlights. Offensive highlights. They hardly never show defense (50% of basketball), passing, setting picks, or moving without the ball. They cherry pick the player's best moments, leave out all his shortcomings, and sync it with some modern music, to sell scouts, fans and coaches on a player. They are pure basketball propaganda, IMO. I still watch all of them, but don't get overly excited and won't evaluate a player until I see the player play games on our team, with our players and our coach. I once saw a highlight video of Omondi Amoke, which showed him scoring inside, draining threes, and a good-looking handle, leading a couple of fast breaks up the floor. In person, in our games, he was a very good rebounder, especially offensive rebounds, but he couldn't make a shot outside three feet.sluggo said:Now we can debate whether my opinion is worth anything. But I don't form one without having seen someone play. With Shepherd it is just highlights. I even posted some in this link. I think they together with his stats paint a clear picture. I have seen Foreman play and he is not a pac12 athlete, undersized, and not a good enough shooter to overcome that.SFCityBear said:Interesting that you project Sheppard as a starter, unless you have seen him play. You and everyone else have not mentioned Foreman, who is still on the roster, and who hit a lot of threes for us last season, while probably taking too many shots. I was critical of that last season, but that was what both he and Betley were recruited to do, shoot threes. Foreman did hit a couple of threes in the clutch at the end of games. He is limited in size and in the ability to penetrate and finish, but I think he should be in any rotation, unless Sheppard shows himself to be better, of course. Hyder can be in a rotation, but I would not think he would start, unless he has improved considerably over the summer. He has more upside than Foreman, but I saw nothing much from him last season to warrant him starting ahead of Malik, or getting major minutes. And Hyder can't shoot a three to save himself. He shot too many bricks last season. He has to improve that. I was hoping he could be a point guard, but he hasn't shown that he can do that very well yet either. He is still very young, and can get better.sluggo said:Yes. I see Call having a 7 man team, those 5 plus Hyder and Kuany. So two of three of Brown, Hyder and Shepherd start. I think Brown and Shepherd are most likely with Hyder relieving either of them. Celestine is the 3 and GA and Kelly are 4/5. Kuany comes in for Celestine or one of the bigs.calumnus said:sluggo said:If you watch him play his strength is off the dribble, either taking it to the basket or settling for the midrange. So I think he will do a lot of Paris Austin, late in the shot clock things. His Assist to turnover ratio is only a little over 1-to-1, so he will not be a classic 1. I think he pairs with Brown, who brings great defense. It certainly does not hurt that he will be in his fifth year with a lot of experience and physical maturity.calumnus said:
I wonder if he will mostly play PG (challenge Brown for minutes/starts) or play the 2 (seems to be a lot of emphasis of him as a scorer) with the idea he will help replace Bradley and Betley.
If you want to feel positive about him, check out
So you are guessing our starting lineup will be Kelly, GA, Celestine, Sheppard, Brown?
I agree, he looks good creating off the dribble. If we we had another obvious option at 2/3 I'd like to see him mostly at PG. I am hoping 1 or 2 of our wings has a breakout season.
If other players improve, then they get minutes. I think Thorpe is most likely to earn them. He makes sense in an 8 man rotation replacing Kelly at the 5.
That is what I think should happen. What I think will happen is that Fox will play like 12 players in almost random configurations.
Over two years, Thorpe has improved slightly, and so has Lars. It is hard to choose between them, as they have different skills and different weaknesses. But I haven't seen anything from Thorpe that would make me think he was ahead of Lars at the end of last season. It looks more like a 9-man usual rotation to me.
I understand your points about Foreman. I agree that he is undersized, but I don't agree with the rest of your opinion.
Last season, Foreman had these PAC12 numbers:
44 threes made, 15th in the PAC12
2.9 threes made per 40 minutes, 4th in the PAC12
FT% 0.868, tied for 4th in the PAC12
Assist/Turnover Ratio 1.4, tied for 27th in the PAC12
All that tells me he qualifies as a PAC12 athlete.
Here are his numbers per 40 minutes, compared to his Cal teammates:
2.9 threes made, 1st on the Cal team
FT% 0.868, 1st on the Cal team
Assists 3.0, 3rd on the Cal team
Fewest turnovers 2.1, tied for 4th on the Cal team
Assist/Turnover Ratio 1.4, 3rd on the Cal team
Steals 0.9, tied for 3rd on the Cal team
I don't say that Malik should be the starter, only that he was one of Cal's best players last season, albeit on a bad team, and his numbers were the best of all the returning players in several categories. Malik's 3pt shooting percentage dropped 5% from his previous season. He is undersized, as you said, and as such, Fox needs to scheme for getting him more open looks, maybe even mid range shots from behind double screens. If Monty was his coach, he'd be getting those open looks. If Sheppard or Roberson are better players, then maybe Malik does not play much, if they need some scoring, Malik still needs to be allowed to compete for minutes, IMO. My only concern with Malik is his defense against bigger guards, so matchups will be important in giving him minutes.