Hypothetical For Next Season
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Woodrow said:
Kcmatt7 said:
I do not know who would want to take Dotson in the first. He can’t shoot the NBA 3 yet and he will not finish at the NBA level like he did last season. He’s not a prolific passer.
I’d be shocked.
This is my thinking as well. He isn’t strong enough to finish at the rim in the NBA, can’t make NBA threes, and can’t create his own shot. He’s just not a NBA PG right now. He will be in time, but I don’t see it right now
Ditto all the way around. Just some more seasoning.
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I repeat though, if Frank can’t make it to first round why would Dotson? I think Dotson might be accepting getting drafted second round.
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I think Grimes needs to mature. He just turned 19 so he’s a little bit behind most guys. For reference, he’s only 8 months older than R.J. Hampton who was a 2020 kid until recently. I still can’t see him coming back. I’m not sure how much he and Devon will talk about their plans, so if they both take it to the end their decisions may be totally independent.
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@ajvan Even though Wayne was ranked 11th the year he signed with KU, I don’t think Wayne was being touted as a Top 5 mock NBA draft pick b4 the season started like Q. So, Q has a longer drop than Wayne, and it could take more time for “rubber meets the road” with Q. I think HEM nailed it when he said that if Q comes back feeling somewhat “victimized”, then it’s “stick a fork in him” time. If Q opens his eyes and ears, and quits believing the hype, and starts to give his all, then he has a chance to probably be a good player for us. I hope for the best, because he did have several really good games for us. But just like the NBA combine illustrates, Q is maddenly inconsistent. First game, he puts up 9 points, and shows up all over the stat sheet. 2nd game he is “Lost In Space”…goes 1 for 9, takes an absolutely horrible shot when the game is on the line, and completely destroys whatever momentum he built up in the 1st game. He’s immature…he needs to grow up.
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@KUSTEVE Wayne Selden may not have been a projected top 5 pick, but I think I remember him being a projected late lottery pick prior to his freshman season.
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approxinfinity said:
I repeat though, if Frank can’t make it to first round why would Dotson? I think Dotson might be accepting getting drafted second round.
Frank was sub 6-0 and Dotson is not. That still matters to a lot of NBA people.
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@Texas-Hawk-10 d dot also this good as a frosh! Showing up the other pts except for shooting! I hope that’s a factor to come back. Weak draft though
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@ajvan I can buy Q as a distributor or ball-handler, and as long as the ball is in his hands to be a playmaker I would be okay with it. He actually made some really gorgeous passes last season. My worry with that is if Grimes had the ball in his hands all the time that he would also get a lot of shots up, which, looking at his 38.4 FG% and 8.7 PER from last season, would probably not be a good thing for KU.
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@KirkIsMyHinrich Nice analysis. Agreed, he showed flashes and we know from his HS reels he knows how to pass. My concerns are he’s not especially fast leading the break or putting pressure on a defense. Not strong/confident with the ball. And made a lot of bone head plays that you can’t have from a lead PG. Also not a threat to score at the rim for the above reasons.
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@ajvan He really just needs to get better across the board. Defense, rebounding, finishing, free-throw shooting, speed, strength. As it’s already been pointed out, attitude is probably the most important one. His comments that you quoted make it sound like he didn’t think he was being used properly last season, and that these couple of games validate that. If that’s his mentality, I’m not sure he’s looking to get better in his areas of weakness. Maybe I’m just reading too much into it. I’d kind of rather just play McBride and Braun. They seem like they have the right attitude. DMac too, by the way.
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His reads are to slow, it’s like you see it, me and probably you guys see the open guy before him, by the time we holler thru the tv to pass it, the D hears it too. To late! By the way he interviewed and answered the questions about Self, gotta say I was impressed with him. I really thing he was trying. Puzzling. I think his teammates liked him too. I think his frustrations were w/himself. Kill me now. The bad part was his eagerness to leave, IMO.
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Now that’s he’s talking about coming back and having the ball in his hands…please tell me this won’t affect the Hampton recruitment.
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@ajvan that’s not the interview I heard. I’m not agreeing with that.
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@Crimsonorblue22 You mean the quotes in the KC Star?
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@ajvan I mean having the ball in his hands!
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From KU sports.com
“After Grimes finished the outing with 1-for-9 shooting, Bilas said the draft hopeful “really struggled” and wasn’t able to properly follow up “a pretty good showing” the previous day.
Grimes played 32 minutes Friday, going 1-for-6 on 3-pointers. He finished with 9 points, 4 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 steal, 1 block and 2 turnovers.
ESPN front office insider Bobby Marks noted during the broadcast that back before the 2018-19 season began Grimes was considered a top-20 pick.
“Now we don’t even have him ranked,” Marks continued. “This gave him an opportunity to kind of showcase in front of NBA teams some things that he didn’t do at the University of Kansas.”
Although Marks praised Grimes for doing “a little bit of everything” in Thursday’s scrimmage, when Grimes scored 9 points and rounded out his stat line with 4 boards, 3 assists and 3 steals, he maintained Grimes is not a one-and-done type of talent.
“I don’t care what kind of feedback you get in the next 24 hours,” Marks said, adding Grimes needs to become a more consistent player.”
Not sure I would want him back at KU, because I don’t think grimes is mentally invested in the college game. I’m betting his parents have been and are continuing to fuel his delusion that he is NBA material. Non-delusional parents would have told him a while back to stay in School and develop there, get stronger, work on his game, and work towards getting a degree unless his draft stock rises to a sure first rounder. Non-delusional parents would have told him that nba people as well as overseas pro recruiters would rather have more mature, more developed physically, more seasoned, more prepared kids then 19 year olds except in rare cases. Non-delusional parents would have told him a pro basketball career is relatively short on average, and that his next chapter in life will at minimum require an undergraduate degree, and stats show that it more difficult to complete that degree when you are older and trying to balance working and going to school. Non-delusional parents would have explained to him that college is a very valuable time in one’s life, priceless experiences, making connections and friends, expanding one’s mind and learning new things, and having FUN at the time of your life when you are supposed to. That you can have your cake and eat it too… a degree and going pro! But Grimes and his parents are drinking the koolaid.
And - On Hampton, I would LOVE to be wrong, and would happily eat my words with both hands, but haven’t we seen the OAD movie many times already?? We pretty much know the plot by heart. They shine early on against lesser competition, then by conference play they struggle, trying to learn the system, doing their best to play D even though they aren’t mentally 100% invested because they know they are moving on to the schlepathon that is the No Defense Association next year, Self having to balance giving them their requisite OAD minutes and benching them for freshman mistakes. Then when we lose in whatever round of the tourney, they tweet “what an amazing experience it was playing for KU, thanks all for the memories” and announce they are leaving.
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@Crimsonorblue22 Totally, I think he had the ball in his hands plenty of times.
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Grimes complaints ring hollow. He had plenty of opportunity. He wasn’t the pony guard, because Dotson was the better option. If that’s the case, why would he be a better nba point guard than college? Delusional kiddo. Hope he gets his head on straight, he has a ton of work ahead of him.
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@Bosthawk I have real mixed feelings about calling out parents as good or bad based on whether their kids go to school, or go pro. If you wanted to substitute the phrase “non-delusional parents” for " good parents", then I could certainly feel more at ease. I’m sure they’ve been told for years their son was a lock for the NBA, so they would naturally feel the problem with Q’s game last year was he wasn’t handling the ball, running the offense, which was a big change for him. Which is why Q said we hadn’t seen 50% of his game. The NBA combine is currently blowing up their hopes and dreams because it is exposing it wasn’t the system he was in that made him play so poorly. Big dreams die hard, and I’m not going to fault Q or his parents for not seeing this as clearly as those of us who aren’t nearly as emotionally invested in the situation.
As for not valuing the college bb experience, I blame the whole system for that. How many Top 10 recruits are coming back for their 2nd year of college? Not very many. The NBA, and the allure of huge money has cheapened the whole college experience. You have a guy like Wayne Selden, who wasn’t even drafted, who made 1.5 million last year. If Wayne is retained by the Bulls next year, he will have made 4.7 million dollars in his first 3 years. If we amortize that over a 30 year period, he would average $157,000 a year. I am sure there are lots of KU grads who wouldn’t mind that.
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@Bosthawk Hampton is a unicorn. He also LOVES KU so I think he would at least unpack for his one year here. So if he loves KU why hasn’t he committed yet well his dad is heavily involved… Fingers crossed. Things are still looking good right now.
@dylans Who was the horse guard?
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@KUSTEVE there were a whole lot of guys playing in the combine that we will never see playing in the NBA. Top guys weren’t there, so anyone that looked decent, wasn’t playing against future NBA guys, just my opinion. Tennessee boys weren’t impressive. They also didn’t show much of the games. Saw Romeo interview, did he have a good year? I think he’s picked pretty high.
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@BShark gotta love auto correct. I don’t know what I typed, but it wasn’t pony!
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dylans said:
@BShark gotta love auto correct. I don’t know what I typed, but it wasn’t pony!
My assumption was you meant point guard. Phones are goofy sometimes.
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@BShark what I meant and what my fat fingers type are often far different things!
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I took your suggestion and edited my post from “good” to “non-delusional” parents
but as a parent, (and I know ther are lots of parents on this site ) I can only say that I know that I would give my son that advice. The info and statistics are out there in plain sight. Parents are supposed to see the big picture and do what’s best for their kids, even when it is at odds with how they feel. And yes I do understand how easy it is to live vicariously thru your kids, especially when they are excellent In sports which our society places an outsized importance on.
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Ask yourself: “Is this really what we have to do to win?”
These OADs are the “fools gold” we’ve all been talking about for a few years now.
It’s the “let’s take the lazy approach” to college basketball. After all, it is hard to find good players who will work their butts off through college. And I mean WORK! I mean maximizing their time to make it all about basketball and academics.
We get a team of these guys and we beef up our developmental coaching, we are going to win a lot of games. More than we win now.
I don’t know how much more of this OAD drama I can handle. The quality of D1 has dropped so far it is unrecognizable.
But until we change to a true developmental program, I’ll cheer on the big talent. It’s about all we have now.
I don’t want us to become another Duke. Duke was the laughing stock of college basketball last year… losing with all that NBA talent. Coach K looked like a washed up coach. He could hardly have wished for a better scenario than he had.
I miss real basketball!