Bill Self Says No To Point Guards?



  • Frankly, the guards need to work on their skillset like there is no tomorrow, learn the offense, learn D, learn their new teammates to develop some chemistry…and let Self plug-n-play them. I’m not sure what we have (yet) in Connor Frankamp. If he gets some notion he wants to transfer, he’d be going downwards (Div2, where Im sure he’ll shine). If his improvement doesnt result in improved shooting and mpg, he should consider redshirting.

    “Recruiting” is a peculiar topic, as you know you’ll never get everybody you target. And lets say you do get the #1PG (Selby)…there are no guarantees what fate may cause thereafter. Or how the career of a #4 PG, 5star top25 guy may go (EJ). Or, look at Louisville and UConn…or our own Tyshawn–> lower ranked guys who kept developing far beyond their initial rankings. Agree with HEM that a higher ranking enhances the chances that a kid will pan out as an impact player. Sherron and Chalmers (both MickeyDs) are great positive examples. Selby would be a negative example, but all he had to do was return for Yr2, and people would have been singing his praises, and he might have gone lotto. The ESPN guys wont let go of a fact that a kid was the #1 rated PG. All Selby had to do was play 25-28mpg as a healthy player. The rest would have taken care of itself, as his talent would have been evident. But no one told him he needed to show a consistent trend with that talent. Same thing goes for EJ: all he had to do sr. yr was ‘play angry’ and show 5-6 30+pt games, or at least 10 games 20+pts, and he would have been seen as delivering on his 5star talent and NBA level hops.

    To me, recruiting Devonte Graham was a step in the right direction. And I dont mind Frank Mason, as he is fast, strong, physical, fearless, and has quick feet on D. He can be the ‘project’ Self diamond-in-the-rough, as was Tyshawn. You see how Naadir (with hindsight now) fell short of those qualities. I agree that Anrio Adams, physically, could have been another diamond-with-low-ranking…but, see, his problem was between the ears. Didnt pan out. Same issue with Tyrone Appleton, off court issues.



  • Another thought is Self maybe watching some NBA (says he loves watching the games), and seeing everyone from Chalmers/Cole to Wade to LBJ “bring the ball up” has maybe got Self tantalized a bit…especially considering the NBA has a shorter possession clock, and now the NCAA is talking about experimenting with shortening it. Self wants to be ready. Just an idea. Just as facing Marcus Smart who beat KU in AFH with hustle, physicality, and all-round play. That had to make an impression on Self.



  • Self’s use of the word “closer” (crunchtime finisher), could apply to any player capable of taking over, not just a PG/lead/combo guard.



  • Key point: God love him, but Bill Self simply cannot stop himself from recruiting scorers. He was that himself to an extent (dropped 20+ on KU in AFH personally, I think), he likes that “threat from every position”, and tries to built it into his teams. It appears he thinks he can teach better ball-handling and defense and running the offense. And he succeeds to varying degrees. Now couple the proper aggressive mentality, and you have the recipe for a Bill Self recruit actually becoming successful under Self. The physicality he requires is part mental, and part physical development under Andrea Hudy (“Huditioning”…). Why on earth would Bill Self be interested in Connor Frankamp? Because that 5’11" wafer showed he could score almost at will at the high school level. So Self is seeing how far he can develop the other needed traits in the kid. We shall all see if they both succeed.

    If you listen to Graham, he gives equal verbiage about himself as “create opportunity for others” as well as “scoring”. Devonte Graham is a combo guard, who will be expected to do it all. McLemore said he does a good job defensively already. Thats great news from BMac!



  • @ralster

    “especially considering the NBA has a shorter possession clock, and now the NCAA is talking about experimenting with shortening it. Self wants to be ready.”

    Bingo!



  • @wrwlumpy

    “I doubt that AWIII would have become a faster ball handler. Self wants a guard that resembles Bill Self at OSU.”

    Hadn’t thought of it quite this way, but now that you write it your explanation seems to make the most sense of any I have read about the AWIII’s departure.



  • @drgnslayr

    “But… where does the leadership come from?”

    Good question. Answer this coming season: Selden.

    Wayne better get a good saddle pad. The team is going to be on his back from the first tip off. I don’t foresee as much scoring coming out of the paint, as in past years, unless: a) Perry has learned to muscle against the long and strongs; and b) unless Alexander has more back to the basket game than his highlight videos suggest. Maybe Micklelson, or Traylor, or Lucas will surprise us though. But I really think this coming year’s paint points are going to have to come off Wisconsin style drive-and-dishes and stick backs, rather than an inside out game, where our bigs can score back to basket. This scoring weakness in the paint won’t show up till we play some good non conference teams with blue meanies inside. Hope I’m wrong, but as I believe you have pointed out on occasion we’ve got the scoring in the Ellis chassis and the motors and explosiveness in the Traylor/Alexander chassises, but what we need is the scoring, explosiveness and motor in the same chassis.



  • As far as recruiting guards…I think Self is fine with his recruits fulfilling his all-around requirements. That could be 5’10 Sherron or Mason…or that could be 6’3 Brady or Reed or Tyshawn. Or 6’1 Chalmers and RussRob. Its all in how they play. Other than being a smart scorer, I cannot visualize what type of player Self was to the “eye-test” as I didnt watch college bball back then…I’m guessing he was a bit more fiery than Brady…maybe more like a ‘combo’ of Tyrel Reed and Aaron Craft? I’ll have to go check for YouTube video of Self at OkieState, if there is any…cant believe I havent tried to do that yet!



  • @ralster

    I always remember Reed distilling what a perimeter guy had to do to play in the rotation: guard, protect, feed the post, hit the open trey.

    What distinguished the '08 triumvirate of RR, Chalmers, and Sherron was that they could do all the basic requirements for perimeter rotation minutes, PLUS they could all put it on the deck and go to iron. Thus, when Self needed a lot of attack from the perimeter to foul up teams, He could come with RR, Chalmers and Sherron, and all hell broke loose. And, while Brandon was not strong on the drive with his left hand, he could on occasion slash with his right by over powering his opponent with his strength and then go suborbital at the iron. Those were four full time threats in addition to being sound perimeter players in all of the basic requirements. KU has never had four perimeter players since that were both sound in the basics AND full time deck threats. My hunch is that what Self was trying to say in his Eisenhower-ese about his happiness with signing Devonte and Svee is that Self, at least, believes adding Devonte and Svee to Selden, Mason, Frankamp, and Greene, ought to yield by late in the season at least 4 players sound in the basics and able to put it on the deck, and that that is Wild Bill’s idea of threat nirvana on the perimeter.

    I can’t say I am very confident that it will, but a board rat loses most of the time betting against Self’s expectations.

    And if one just considers the variety in perimeter players Self has it is pretty clear that, if he coaches them up, and gets them at least sound in the basic requirements by, say, January, there is almost no perimeter matchup that KU will come up against that Self will not have several ways to try to exploit a weakness.



  • @jaybate 1.0 Your perfect example of the 08 triumvirate, brings to mind the other time we had 3 guys capable of all of the requirements: 2012RunnerUp squad with Tyshawn, Elijah, and Travis. Travis could score in the paint, hit the 3, and defend. And he was scrappy. Same for EJ. Same for Tyshawn. That’s 3 on the floor at most times. See how far experienced, all-round guards can take us? BMac was not the slasher that Tyshawn was. Nor the ball handler. Look what happened to lone EJ. This is Self’s point as well, driven home yet again. So he says now the same things he said back in 06-07, when explaining his recruits and playstyle requirements. Only now, they have more meaning–as the msg was poignantly driven home again for any of those that forgot what and why Self said what he did back 8yrs ago. He was right, wasnt he?



  • I don’t know as much as you all do, but I’ve been wondering if he’s telling us the truth… at least as much as he can. He wants a true floor leader and he wants combos who can be the floor leader. To an outsider, it sounds a bit like doublespeak.

    But in some ways, it could be in Bill Self’s interest to not have a traditional “point guard” that is a singular leader on the floor because it’s actually a ‘single point of failure’. In other words, a true point guard invites the other team to ‘cut off the head’ and slay the dragon-- the defense keys on that guard and disrupts that one position and the offense falls into chaos.

    So perhaps this is why he favors combos and wants multiple players that can bring the ball up the floor and handle it. That said, he still needs a floor leader, but not one that the team is all-dependent upon.

    The ambiguity might be by design.



  • @bskeet nice point-ha!



  • @bskeet Let me simplify Self’s idea: He wants multiple floor leaders, ball handlers, and scorers. Think of the 08 Champs with Chalmers+RussRob+Sherron. That’s exactly what he wants to duplicate. The rankings, the toughness, the defensive competence, the decision-making, and the leadership.

    Always think of the 08Champs, as that was Self’s best team, all his own high-level recruiting + yrs of coaching them up…all rolled into 1 experienced team. Bill Self ball at its finest. Bill Self AGAIN just used the 08guys as a benchmark–he is telling you exactly what he wants. He wants to duplicate the 08 team’s strengths.

    I dont think there is any double talk at all. He’s wanted competence in all areas, even excellence if at all possible.



  • @ralster

    You know, i thought about including the '12 trio of TT, EJ and Travis, because if they had all been healthy for most of the season they would have more than qualified. But my recollection was that EJ had knee problems the second half of the season, and Trav was in boot much of the season, so they really didn’t get to do what they were capable of doing. I think we probably agree that if EJ and Trav had been healthy, we would in all probability be talking about Self’s second ring team. They almost came back and beat UK with two of three perimeter players playing crippled and little depth anywhere. A healthy EJ with his pop and a healthy Travis with his trey gun clicking, plus all that experience and maturity, plus a 4 that pulled in rebounds like a black hole sucks in matter, and stretched defenses, too, plus a 7 foot rim protector that left AD 1-10 equaled second ring.

    P.S.: Something folks forget about Trav is that when he was healthy his senior season he shot >40% from trey. I will always believe that had he not played on a bum wheel that finally put him in a boot his junior season, Trav would have drained at or near 40% for that '12 team. Same for EJ. He made a lot of big treys late in the season, despite the bad wheel. But if he had been healthy his gun from trey, combined with Trav at 40% from trey, would easily have overcome Tyshawn’s late season trey slump. It was a great team inspite of everything. But the fact was, if it had stayed healthy it would have been a team for the ages. Despite my recognition of the greatness of the '08 team, the '12 team is my favorite of all of Self’s teams, and perhaps my favorite KU team of all time, even though they came up a game shy. I have a hunch that Self, though he lives in what happened, not what could have been, harbors a deep, deep, deep respect and love for that '12 team.



  • Reading everyone’s posts, which I will say is high quality stuff (as usual), I can honestly say I don’t know what to make of it.

    Self really will play the guys he thinks gives him the best opportunity to win. We (I) may disagree with his selections.

    Look at 2012-13 – very limited ball handling. EJ pretty good, others not so much until Tharpe was in. But it was his best lineup.

    If ball handlers, though, don’t measure up to other guys, then he’ll go with one ball handler.

    It’s having your cake and eating it too. If on balance the best players can also handle the ball, that is what he prefers.

    When he says “point guard”, maybe he just means having just that one guy out there. I like that explanation. Again, I am vexed, flummoxed, confused.



  • @HighEliteMajor I just hate when I am flummoxed!



  • When creative minds start expressing ambiguities, it is usually because their inquiries into the essences of their fields is taking them near the ambiguity that lies at the center of most human inquiry. Quantum theory ultimately took Erwin Schrodinger and other mathematicians and physicists to the knowledge reality itself is a variety of probability functions that actually exist based on how we interact with them. The cat really is both alive and dead. The locality assumption does not hold in all realms. And before that light was discovered to be both waves and particles. Bart Kosko showed A and Not A could exist simultaneously. There really are a billion or more exoplanets like earth in the Milky Way. Simultaneity of opposites happens. We cannot tell if this is because of how our minds work, or because the world works this way, or both, but we know it to be true because measurement with high confidence verifies the initial thought experiments and calculations.

    Self is just facing up to logical implications of the simultaneity of guard play in the structure and dynamics of the game that he, as a young man early accepted intuitively, then fled from to eliminate the contradiction, and has now re-embraced the ambiguity, with the profound humility that comes of admitting the deep contradictions of life, because the measurable contradictions would not go away.

    We are talking here about Schroedinger’s Guards. In one circumstance they are point guards, while in another lead guards. And what determines it is not us but them. But the real unsettling truth is they are both simultaneously.



  • HA–> Let all this smoke & confusion be a fog for opposing coaches trying to figure out Self’s coming roster! Beware of the Phog! (Self just created a battleship-smokescreen amt of fog with his statements. I bet he is grinning bigtime. Especially after watching the camp game video…)

    RCJH



  • God help the opponent if Frank Mason can shoot a combined 45-50% FG percentage this coming season. Reports on kusports were that Frank has added the mid-range pullup J, and hit 2 threes, without hesitating. Coupled with much better decisions on when to go allSherron & penetrate, vs when to pick & pop…This is good. Notice that Frank’s BLUE squad beat the RED squad by double-digits. Guess who the PG’s were for BLUE? Mason + Selden. Selden even quoted as saying: “I’ve been working on my ballhandling, so I can assume more of a leadership role this year.” And he was very effective at it in the scrimmage. A press observer said Selden looked like a “pro” playing against boys. Interesting because the Red opponent had McLemore, Aldrich, Frankamp…

    Greene, of course, led all scorers. And Traylor dribble-drop stepped around Cole 4 times, each time finishing at the rim with a dunk or a hook. He also hit a 14ft face up jumper.

    These guys are hungry, driven, and pissed off about last year. BOTH Greene and Selden called last year’s team “SOFT”. Both said they wanted to show the new kids ‘what Kansas bball was all about’, and wanted to give Self the type of team that he used to have in years past.

    I like the sound of all of this.



  • This post is deleted!


  • @ralster

    Now you’ve really got me amped! Selden on the bounce. Greene and Selden talking toughness! Jam Tray putting the strawberry slam on Cole!!! Mason making Js!!! Players calling last year’s team soft!

    REAL SELF BALL AGAIN!!!

    Now I have reason to live another year!!!

    YEEEEEEE HAAAAAWWWWWW!!!



  • Following up on @ralster and @jaybate’s comments, from the “words mean something” category –

    “We are a tough group. Last year to be honest, we weren’t tough. We were soft,” Selden said of a 25-10 team that won the Big 12 title and went 1-1 in the NCAAs.

    This may be the single most important development heading into next season. Tharpe and Wiggins are gone. They are the only “softer” players that departed. But add them to finesse guy Ellis, and you had 3 of your 5 starters that weren’t, shall we say, physical.

    And I wonder, if Greene’s play in camp and practice demonstrates that he is the best option at the 3, does Self bring top 10 recruit Oubre off the bench? Or does he start Oubre because he is a top 10 guy?



  • @ralster Very glad to hear that these guys look hungry. Selden, Mason and Traylor are certainly gritty and tough kids and Greene and Oubre seem to similarly wired.

    I really like the idea of Selden sharing some of the PG duties with Mason / CF / Graham / Svee…or whoever ends up getting those minutes. I know we need a guy late in the game who feels comfortable bringing the ball up the court but it may not be a bad thing if that person is Selden. Deandre Kane did not exactly look like the prototypical guy to bring up the ball for ISU last year but it worked out ok.



  • @joeloveshawks I just can’t get in my head that Selden can “bring up the ball”. Afraid to say point now! I hope he can, just based on his passing and handles last year, can’t see it. I think he has a great chance at being one of the best sg’s, as long as he’s healthy. I hope he proves me wrong!



  • Selden had some really good no-look passes and assists last year. But he knows his handles/dribbling needs to get a lot better for the next level, as did McLemore’s. His high-school highlight mixtape showed not only the dunk-fest, but also several no-look or timely-assist passes to teammates. Selden has a knack for passing, and is a 6’5 “QB”–> his passing angles will be different than those of a 5’10 guard. Give. Wayne. Selden. The. Ball.

    It would be like having our own “good” Marcus Smart. Now you all also saw who was the Man, and who was the Flop…when “last year’s” Smart faced froshSelden head to head. I like betting on Wayne Selden.

    Now I got visions of Wayne Selden taking his 220lb hops on a Tyshawn-like penetration to the rim–> No contortions needed. If he can pull off playing PG, he will go NBA top5 pick. Watch big Wayne deliver!!!



  • @ralster can you imagine if Smart picked us over Ford? I bet he wishes he could do it over! He sure wouldn’t be famous for flopping. And maybe forte joins him. Is forte still there? Gotta say I will miss heslip and smart. The osu game at AFH was an exciting one!



  • @Crimsonorblue22 No maybe about it - Smart and Forte were a package deal, no matter where they went. I think they both would have looked good in Crimson and Blue. And Smart most likely wouldn’t have acted the fool under Coach Self.



  • @nuleafjhawk smart picked the coach he could control! Pretty sure the Fortes wanted KU. Interesting to see what happens to osu. Need them to be great!



  • @Crimsonorblue22

    To the best of my recollection, KU did not offer to Forte and that doomed any chance of getting Smart. I have to admit that OSU has had really good luck of late with who I call the smurfs on steroids, Keiton Page first and then Phil Forte.



  • @JayHawkFanToo I heard that too. Those 2 smurfs, killed us! Heslip did too.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 Agree to disagree. I think Wayne will be a huge part of the offense including bringing up the ball on occasion when Mason or CF don’t. This is Wayne’s team.



  • @JayHawkFanToo Actually, Forte was offered by KU. I’m not saying this in any kind of name-dropping way, just as a matter of fact - I’ve known the Fortes for 25 years. When " little Phil " was a sophomore in High School, " big Phil (an ex KU football player, btw) told me that his son was getting some offers from not so well known colleges. Then when he was a junior, people were starting to take notice. By the time he was a senior, he was in the hunt for some pretty good basketball schools. Big Phil told me that he was offered by KU, but after consideration decided not to go there. He LOVES KU, said his room is like a shrine to all things KU, but he didn’t have enough confidence in himself and didn’t think he could make a contribution at KU. He wanted to go somewhere where he could get some significant playing time. Big Phil told me - he’s good, but he ain’t KU good.

    Good call, Big Phil…



  • @nuleafjhawk good story! He sure doesn’t mind shooting lights out on us!! Wonder what big Phil thinks about lil Ford??



  • @Crimsonorblue22 No joke! It makes me sick that he didn’t come here - I guess he got over his lack of confidence!



  • @nuleafjhawk

    Alas, KU good varies from year to year, and he almost certainly WOULD have been KU GOOD-enough to start 1 or 2 seasons at KU the way things broke.

    Regardless, he got some good times at OSU.



  • @jaybate 1.0 remember everyone plays their best against us too!



  • @Crimsonorblue22 Agreed that Smart would have been awesome under Self. But he might not have had the stats as a frosh to go pro (like Selden), so he would have had another year at KU. Its all karma, maybe about Smart. I really hope he wisens up quick, he could be a good pro.

    Maybe we finally got our own short mad3bomber in Frankamp: Reports from the camp games this week say he looks noticeably thicker in the upper body. Hmm. I really do hope he can be a Heslip/Page/Forte type of 3gunner.

    Self likes his athletic guards. Fact: Self has NEVER recruited a KU guard than couldnt dunk the ball. I’ve seen Mason, Sherron, Naadir, Frankamp…all dunk the ball. Can Forte dunk? Maybe Phil Forte, Sr’s impression of Bill Self is that Self favors taller guards, who also are athletic…and didnt think his son was athletic enough. He sure could shoot it, though.

    Note to all: other than a returning LeBryan Nash, OkieState will be REALLY thin. Unknowns. Newbies. Greenies. ChokiePokies. They will be in a real dogfight with TCU and TxTech, and will likely lose to both of those teams, just watch. Those teams are on the rise, OkieState is in decline, starting this last season…which of course points the finger down on the head coach. Travis Ford’s final season at ChokieState, as all his Oklahoma State Cowboys will be packin’ are .22shorts. So you can say they’ll send Ford out-with-a-“pop”…



  • @ralster lol - i don’t know if Forte can dunk or not, but he can dunk it pretty well from 19-30 feet !



  • @ralster I read somewhere recently that Travis Ford has a no buyout clause in his contract, meaning that should Okie St. decide to terminate his contract they would have to pay ALL of the remaining salary. His contract runs through the '18-'19 season and has $13.825 million remaining on it. After this year there will be $11.2 million remaining.

    The point of this is I’m not sure how monumentally bad he’ll have to be for the Okie St. board of regents to swallow that much salary, and then on top of that pay a new coach. I know that T. Boone Pickens can probably scrape together that much scratch digging through his couch cushions, but it wouldn’t surprise me if they wait until he’s closer to the end of that contract before finally biting the bullet and getting rid of Ford.



  • @icthawkfan316 I just can’t see any promise for Ford after last years mess.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 By that logic he should be gone now though, right?



  • @icthawkfan316 yes, what do you think?



  • @Crimsonorblue22 My thought is that yes, performance wise he should be gone now. But he’s not, so the question then is why?

    Does he have a good team returning? No. Smart & Markel Brown are gone. They’ll return Forte, Nash, & Cobbins should be back from injury. No one else noteworthy.

    Does he have a good recruiting class coming in? It’s pretty decent. ESPN ranks it at 38th. The class is highlighted by a couple of 4 star forwards - small forward Joe Burton & power forward Mitchell Solomon. They also have a 7 foot JuCo player named Anthony Allen who led all JuCo players in blocked shots this past year. Allen was being recruited by some other reputable schools (saw Louisville on one list) so he’s probably decent. (note: rivals shows him as a commitment but not having signed a LOI). And they have Jeff Newberry who was ranked in the top 10 JuCo players by many services.

    So perhaps that’s the reason. A combination of giving him one more chance while at the same time not wanting to lose any of these new recruits.

    My guess is though, it’s more about the money than anything. If he didn’t have such a ridiculous contract, I think he’d already be gone. And it is because of this that I think he might be able to stink/stick it out a little while longer than just this upcoming season.



  • @icthawkfan316

    According to Barry Tramel there are 5 years left in the contract and more like $11M, which is still a lot of money. If he is fired, he would be paid his salary yearly minus whatever he makes in any new job he takes. It is possible that they could buy him out for a smaller lump sum payment.

    Barry Tramel story and interview…



  • @JayHawkFanToo Here’s the link I found his contract info on:

    [http://www.cowboysrideforfree.com/2014/4/3/5546118/travis-ford-fired](link url)

    It looks like the difference between our figures is the 2 million from the retirement column ($400k/year x 5 years). Not sure if he gets that if he’s fired or not.



  • @icthawkfan316

    I don’t have any idea what the numbers were, I was simply citing Tramel. I would guess that if he is no longer working for OSU he would not get the retirement portion, but then I really have no clue if this is correct.

    I can see where if Ford has another well paying job lined up he would opt for a smaller lump sum that would result in higher overall payout to him.



  • @HighEliteMajor

    Unless Oubre is a 40% trifectate out of the blocks, the best thing that could happen to Oubre is for Greene to start and play 20 mpg and for Oubre to backup and play 20 mpg backup his first season, then carry the team on his back his second season, as appears set to happen with Selden. Frankly, Selden would have been better off had the same situation been possible for him last season. Playing injured really prevented him from developing his game at all last season. It just taught him how to play without a wheel, which is not the same thing as becoming a proficient dribbler, or proficient defender and shooter. This starting as a freshman without a full D1 tool kit is cruel and actually retards skill development, even though it gets them used to D1 speeds. An apprenticeship season lets them do both: get used to D1 speeds and violence, and lets them develop their skills.

    Without a 40% trey, Oubre will find himself in exactly the same position Wiggins was in, only probably with a bit less athleticism. He can either get a bunch of 3 point plays off drives on nights when he is given 15-20 FGAs, or mostly disappear, when he has to play within the scheme. Wiggins was a tremendous player and talent, but UNLESS he was GIVEN the 15-20 FGAs defenders just sagged, guarded his strong hand, denied him strong side, made clear to him that they were going to threaten his health for the draft at the rim, and dared him to shoot treys. It wasn’t fair to Wiggins to expect him to carry the team when he couldn’t even dribble with one of his hands and had a suspect trey. Wiggins frankly made the best of it, despite his tendency to softness. But it wasn’t fair to Wiggins, whether or not his advisors wanted it that way, or Self did. He just flat was not up to the challenge of dominating within the scheme of play, especially once Embiid was gone, and if you recall, that was actually a decently talented array of players he had around him even after Embiid went out. He did his best a couple of games at doing all the scoring and could do it, but as he did, he could not make the rest of the teammates one teeny bit better with dishes and they just stood around. The same, only worse, will occur with Oubre, if Self were to put the team on is back first thing.

    Fortunately, the horse with the saddle pad (and sores) this year is going to be second year, leaned up, hard bodied, experienced, and hopefully hop-restored Wayne Selden.–NOT Oubre!

    Lucky us.

    And lucky Oubre! No doubt he is going to be a fine player, maybe a great one, but everyone benefits by an apprenticeship, even the great ones. Persons often forget that MJ got to start out being a third option behind Worthy and Perkins. And Danny Manning got to learn the ropes his first season on that awesome team of senior sharp shooters.

    Really, regardless of what BS these OADs are being fed about money, and I am always on the side of making money when it is there to be made, at least half of them really can’t play the game as freshman. When you are a super freak at your position that will be a super freak in the L, too, then, fine, jump for the bones. This is why I can see Embiid going even though his game isn’t anywhere near ready. He is a super freak physically who they will work to develop. But if you’re a guy like Selby, or Oubre, or Wiggins, with big holes in your game, and when you get to the L you are going to be an entirely fungible commodity unless your game has no holes, and you can gun the trey enough to create space against men in no boys allowed, then a seasoning year, followed by a Top three scoring option year ought to be the new normal.



  • @jaybate It does make the most sense for Oubre to come off the bench. But does he do that for two seasons? Greene isn’t turning pro after next season.

    Anyway, let’s assume your scenario – realistic starters are Mason, Selden, Greene, Ellis, Alexander.

    Realistic bench rotation guys are CF or Graham, with Oubre, Traylor, Mickelson. And then Graham/CF or Svee getting 5th perimeter man minutes.

    Self’s recent comments about the three ball handler thing would challenge Oubre’s inclusion over Graham or Svee.

    But I expect Oubre and Greene, regardless of Self’s three ball handler discusion, to be two of the four big minutes perimeter guys. If we need more ball handling in a game, the CF, Graham, or Svee gets the nod.

    For sure, two perimeter guys are not going to get minutes.



  • @HighEliteMajor I think Coach is trying to backtrack from his comments following the Devonte signing, and I don’t believe him. I think he is trying to placate Mason and CF. Dangle some carrots out there - keep folks motivated.



  • @HighEliteMajor Again not enough minutes for too many PTPers. It may be that CF or Frank get a shirt, IMO more likely CF.


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