Starters next game



  • @DoubleDD

    Again, read my post. I never said that Traylor and Lucas are the long term solutio,n but they are the better option until Bragg and Diallo become productive…and KU needs to win games until they are ready, right?


  • Banned

    @JayHawkFanToo

    If Coach can’t play Diallo and Bragg against the likes of Harvard, then when will they play?



  • @DoubleDD you are whining🍷koolaid! They will play before the end of conference, ok?


  • Banned

    @JayHawkFanToo

    If coach can’t play Bragg and Diallo against the likes of Harvard? Then will they play?


  • Banned

    @Crimsonorblue22

    Nah not whining. Just know talent when I see it. Not playing the likes of Bragg and Diallo only delays the learning curve.



  • @DoubleDD ok, just trying to make you feel better!



  • @DoubleDD

    They will play when Coach Self feels it will benefit the team and the players the most…he really, really is a good coach and makes an ungodly amount of money to make just this type of decisions and he will know when the time is right. Trying to will something, over which you have no control, to happen will only give you an ulcer. 😞



  • Tonight could very well be the night. Coach Self has been on the recruiting trail. He needs to show potential recruits something. Speaking of potential, wasn’t Steph Curry once a recruit that a lot of D-1 Schools passed on? Could you imagine the recruiting war in hindsight? Wow. It appears in that situation, all he needed was a chance. I see something special in Vick. I am not saying Steph Curry special, but he just has it, in my humble opinion. Looking forward to watching him play. As far as Diallo and Bragg, I am glad they do not appear to complain about their situation. There opportunity will come soon. It has to.



  • Sounds like tonight we will see a shakeup in the bigs minutes. Self said Traylor is nursing an ankle injury, Landon has the toe injury. Perry has the hip… as long as we aren’t in a 2 possession game I think Self will let Bragg & Diallo play 15-20 minutes each…



  • @JayHawkFanToo You said, “Right now, Bragg and Diallo are not better than Lucas, “______” or Mickelson. No one should disputes this either after watching Bragg and Diallo at the Harvard game.”

    I’m looking at all games all players have played.

    With that, I dispute your comment regarding “_______” and in large part Lucas. I don’t regarding Mickelson. Actually, in his time on the floor in two games, Diallo has been perhaps one of our most productive players. Bragg has had more minutes under his belt and thus more ups and downs. Diallo, when you look at his minutes played, has been better than all three of our vets.

    Oddly, I’d say that our best player (per minute) has been Brannen Greene, for what that’s worth.

    Both he and Diallo have only two game sample sizes, but they have been pretty good in their time on the floor. I’m not big on two game sample sizes though.



  • @HighEliteMajor Yeah, tough to compare per minute production when the total minutes is barely 1 half of a basketball game. This has always been my problem comparing stats per minute. I know it’s about the fairest way to do it but it still isn’t fair. I mean, obviously Greene isn’t going to continue to shoot 100% from the field.

    And to me there are a lot of less obvious contributors that make per minute comparisons tough when the subjects being compared have vastly different overall minutes. Things like fatigue, slumps, competition played against (not just teams but individual match-ups), role while in the game, pace of game while playing (I know they can take care of this one with per possession stats but again not the full picture), etc. Not to mention aspects that there are not even stats for, like hustle plays, correct positioning, energy exerted, energy given to the team, good passes that lead to missed shots, hockey assists. The list goes on and on.

    I know you work with the best information available to you and often do a good job of providing some of that unquantifiable context in your analysis. Don’t think I am saying you don’t! However, all of this data, even when taken in context, can only give a snapshot of how well a player is playing. And it would be like that picture was taken from very far away with the camera from my old flip phone. You can see it, it just is pretty hard to make out anything with clarity.

    Eventually it really comes down to “the eye test” and “feel” which is why there is so much disagreement because it’s all so subjective. Trying to make it not, neglects the full story. It’s why some coaches can cut it and others can’t. It’s why statisticians can be valuable assets but do not get paid like the coach.



  • @DoubleDD

    “If coach can’t play Bragg and Diallo against the likes of Harvard? Then will they play?”

    Depends how they have been practicing.

    We all want these guys to start getting minutes so they can become seasoned for March. Self wants that, too.

    But this early in the season, it is important for these young potential stars to EARN their minutes and eventual starting position. EARNING minutes on a court helps young players take POSSESSION of their PT and become RESPONSIBLE and ACCOUNTABLE for what they do with their time on the court.

    Self is spot on with his comments about players “getting it.” (or not)



  • @benshawks08 One thing that I find very interesting is that Self many times goes against the stats. A good example is the Player Efficiency Rating. It is a well respected, advanced stat that uses a number of metrics to measure a player’s total contribution. It a great, all in one stat.

    I don’t think any stat is ever the total picture, and the eye test is very important. I tend to think the stats do match the eye test a great deal of the time, and particularly with the one, most polarizing player on Kansas.

    Last season, I felt that Cliff looked very good in his time on the court. I posted about it many times. I even said a few times that he was our best performer overall. Folks said that Self knew what he was doing. Fine.

    However, Cliff’s Player Efficiency Rating (PER) last season was the best on the team among regulars. The best.

    Our regulars, in order:

    1. Cliff
    2. Ellis
    3. Oubre
    4. Mason
    5. Greene
    6. Graham
    7. Lucas
    8. “______”
    9. Selden

    This seemed to square, for me, exactly with the eye test except that I would have had Mason over Oubre and Selden ahead of “_____”. Again, this is related to net production during minutes on the court.

    I felt Greene should have been starting over Selden as we moved into January. I said that. I suggested making him the 6th man off the bench because he was playing so badly, to change his perspective, to get him reenergized – I don’t know why Self didn’t do that, to be honest.

    Actually, I think the PER stat provides us exactly what our best starting lineup should have been last season given the structure of the team. That may not always be the case, and probably isn’t.

    By the way, Mickelson, who wasn’t a regular, would have been 2nd behind Cliff. After Maui, he was near the top this season. I haven’t checked it though recently. One of the reasons I am a big Hunter Mickelson fan is that, first, he looks good on the court. Many good qualities that we saw in Korea. Further, his stats back it up.

    I really like your comment – “Not to mention aspects that there are not even stats for, like hustle plays, correct positioning, energy exerted, energy given to the team, good passes that lead to missed shots, hockey assists”

    The eye test is really, really important.



  • I’m going to wish upon a dream and pencil in Hunter as tonight’s surprise starter. He’ll play ten consecutive minutes before he gets yanked for Traylor, but that will be long enough for him to stuff the stat sheet to the tune of a half dozen points, rebounds, and two blocks. All of his defenders will feel exonerated even in the event he never sees the court again all season.

    That said, I’ll have a slug of bourbon ready in case Lucas ambles onto the court for the opening tip.



  • @benshawks08 Well put. I have always thought that the items you mention (“good passes that lead to missed shots”, etc.) are the ones that Self evaluates that most of us don’t see (or only see part of the time). Or if we see them…we don’t put as much value on these little things as coaches do. Hence his comments about Lucas in the last game.



  • @HighEliteMajor

    William Bruce Cameron famously;y quoted "Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted."

    It is said that Albert Einstein had the quote written on the backboard in his office and the quote has also been attributed to George Gallup, the creator of the Gallup polls and a very well known statistician who quoted it often.

    You seem to fixate on certain numbers and leave out a lot of factors that do not fit your narrative. a good example is your opinion of Alexander when you completely ignored his weaknesses in defense and how often he got caught out of position and his man would just score or the times he failed to provide weak side help to prevent the ball handler to score…just to name a couple…and solely concentrated on numbers that made your case. Again, these are thing that are not easily measured but a very important part of the game, particularly with Coach Self’s system that emphasized defense.

    Again, there is no denying that Diallo is an athletic freak with extremely long arms and a huge upside and Bragg appears to be one too; however, and as the announcers/analyst in both games he played indicated, he is greener than green when it comes to basketball IQ and at times he seems completely lost on the court. Embiid started the same way but was what I call a “savant” insofar as the game came to him so naturally; I cannot think of another player like him. Yes, Diallo has played in only two games but he has been practicing with team for a while now and I don’t believe he is the savant Embiid is/was.; at least I have not seen it.

    Now, you take an inordinate amount of time to look through the equivalent of an atomic microscope the performances of Traylor and Lucas and come up with very negative assessments. if you do the same analysis for any of the other players and looking though the same biased lens, you would come up with similar conclusions for every and all players. I would do it but frankly…I don’t have the time or inclination to arrive at what would be a preconceived result anyway. Will Rogers famous;y said…there are lies, damn lies and statistics. We both know that statistics can be selectively manipulated to indicate whatever you want to convey; you do this very well.

    You don’t respect Traylor as a player - We get it.

    You don’t respect Lucas as a player - We get it.

    You don’t respect Bill Self as a coach - We get it.

    Everybody in this forum knows I dislike Zenger because his actions have personally affected me and many other Jayhawk fans and I have described in detail before the reasons; however, you don’t see me dissecting the contract(s) he signed on a game to game basis just to show how incompetent he is, do you? I simply state…I still hate Zenger…and everybody knows what I mean.

    Maybe in the future, instead of writing a 15 bullet essay on the shortcomings of certain players and coach, you could simply write:

    I still hate Traylor, Lucas and Self.

    …and I can guarantee you that we will all get the message loud and clear and save a lot of bandwidth in the process.

    @HighEliteMajor , I do respect your knowledge of the game and the effort you put into trying to get your point across but a lot of it comes out as more visceral than pragmatic…which is fine, because it is just your opinion and you are entitled to your opinion in the same way that those of us that do not share you opinion are entitled to ours. This by no means indicates that you are right and the rest of us wrong or the other way around…we simply see things differently, which is what makes our system so great. However, discussing the same thing over and over and over results in diminishing returns and will not change minds anyway and it gets to the point where it amounts to basically wasted time…wouldn’t you agree?

    Sometimes we just need to skip the details and cut to the chase…

    BTW, I still hate Zenger. 🙂



  • @JayHawkFanToo I kind of thought I was in a discussion with @benshawk08 and that the PER is a quite relevant piece of the puzzle and his very relevant eye test comment. The Cliff example seems interesting, at least to my small brain. But you have been quite reserved in your prior replies, I figured this was coming at some point – and I know you are diametrically opposed to my position.

    I respect you and your opinion. I’ll keep this all in mind.

    At the very least, I’ll try to limit my posts to a 12 bullet essay.



  • @HighEliteMajor @JayHawkFanToo

    Strunk and White rule #13: Omit needless words!

    Oops. That probably wasn’t necessary.



  • @benshawks08 In my field, pithiness is next to godliness. The objective is to convey the greatest amount of information in the fewest number of words. Clearly, others here are in a different profession…;)



  • @HighEliteMajor

    No problem, it’s all good and we all learn something in the process. Look at this article by Ken Pomeroy about the plus/minus, which at one time was though/predicted to be the ultimate statistic and turned out to be of no use in college basketball.

    I keep thinking of how much of the game is not quantifiable. For example, take the 51 second in the Harvard game where Perry scored on a 3 point platy to break the tie followed by a jumper that put KU in command for good. To me, these 51 seconds were the biggest difference in the game and yet you can’t really quantify in way that gives it the weight it deserves…or the breakaway dunk that breaks a tie and the opponent’s momentum and spirit? All these intangibles are what makes the game so unpredictable, frustrating and at the same time so darn exhilarating and rewarding…oh well.



  • @JayHawkFanToo I don’t agree with the shorthand. I don’t come to this site for shorthand, I’d go to LJW and read comments if that was what I wanted.

    I love @HighEliteMajor analysis and thoroughness even when it re-iterates an old argument as it adds weight to the argument. I learn something more each time and can watch the game with more knowledge.

    That said, I can appreciate counter arguments to round the overall analysis. Too many take a response from HEM as personal attack and belittlement. That’s where we can all step back at times and take a deeper breath.

    Or, find a way to bring solid reasoning and facts to rebut. What doesn’t sit well is appeals to authority alone, but everyone agrees we’ve got a hall of fame coach. The dialogue teaches Selfs ears and he addressed. I guess we’ll see what changes tonight if even briefly.

    I won’t however, as I’ll be on a plane part of the time, but I will be logged back in and be on ESPN3 to see for myself at some point.

    Rock Chalk.



  • @wissoxfan83 What other site? There is another site? Who the heck is Keegans? In general, WTH you talkin’ bout?



  • @Bwag Omit needless words is not a call for short hand or even shortened responses. It is a quote from a book called “Elements of Style” and can be a useful hint if writing a two sentence response, or a novel. Length has nothing to do with it! Just an English teacher reminded of his Junior AP English class. No judgement intended.

    (Guess I could have just said “no malice”)



  • @benshawks08 Strunk and White has been panned in some recent reviews. e.g., this article a few years ago from the Chronicle of Higher Education.

    http://chronicle.com/article/50-Years-of-Stupid-Grammar/25497

    Not that it doesn’t have some good points, but not everything in it should be considered gospel.



  • @Bwag

    I don’t believe my intent was or my words meant to limit comments and I did not mention shorthand at all. I simply suggested that, for expediency sake, to “cut to the chase” as it were. You are welcome to post whatever you want and only the board moderator/owner has the discretion to limit comments, I certainly don’t.

    You must not come to this forum much if you don’t know that some of the issues have been rehashed over and over and over and at this time, members have their own opinions and likely will not change…repetition notwithstanding. So post away and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. least of all …me. 😉



  • @benshawks08 “English is a stretch language; one size fits all. That does not mean anything goes; in most instances, anything does not go. But the language, as it changes, conforms itself to special groups and occasions.”

    • William Safire, “On Language.” Another book worth checking out.


  • @tundrahok Agree S an W is past its prime! #13 is the only one that stuck with me after high school. Don’t know whether it is due to the familiarity of the number or the rule itself. I still think at least that one is still good!



  • @HighEliteMajor By all means, do not limit your analysis based on what a Bill Self cheerleader said. By his logic, he could just simply write, “Bill Self made the right decision. He has never been wrong, nor will he ever be. He gets paid a lot of money to coach basketball, ergo, he’s infallible.”


  • Banned

    @JayHawkFanToo

    I just want to apologize to you for firing on you even though you may have not have deserved it. Yet I’m tired of KU fans that question coach this year being label haters.

    I don’t hate Coach and I don’t hate Landon, and I don’t hate Traylor. Yet I do love the Jayhawks. So yes I’m not happy with Coach.

    So forgive me and take my comments for what they are worth.



  • @DoubleDD

    No need to apologize. What we say here in the context of a discussion is just opinion and we all have different ones. It would be pretty boring if we all the exact same opinion. I take your comment as those from valued member of our little forum; i might not necessarily agree with them but it does not make them wrong or right…just different.


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