Bill Marsh wrote:MUSeashells&Balloons wrote:nycbefan wrote:Marquette is losing a lot more than their fans want to admit. Just making the tournament would be a good season for Marquette.
What are you smoking?
So, Marquette put together their best season in 10 years, lose 4 key players from that team, but it will be no
trouble to replace them?
I love to hear MU disparaging their own players, saying that a kid like Cadougan really wasn't that good. Well, he and the rest were good enough to get them to the Elite 8. I'd say those guys were pretty damn good. Replacing them, replacing their experience, their toughness, and the chemistry they had will be very difficult.
aughnanure wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:MUSeashells&Balloons wrote:
What are you smoking?
So, Marquette put together their best season in 10 years, lose 4 key players from that team, but it will be no
trouble to replace them?
I love to hear MU disparaging their own players, saying that a kid like Cadougan really wasn't that good. Well, he and the rest were good enough to get them to the Elite 8. I'd say those guys were pretty damn good. Replacing them, replacing their experience, their toughness, and the chemistry they had will be very difficult.
Try 3. But sure, if you don't actually know the players that does make your argument easier.
Bill Marsh wrote:
And you know the players on everyone else's team?
Oh, yeah, you probably do because they're all returning 4-5 starters. But you're going to beat them with your bench, right?
Bill Marsh wrote:MUSeashells&Balloons wrote:nycbefan wrote:Marquette is losing a lot more than their fans want to admit. Just making the tournament would be a good season for Marquette.
What are you smoking?
So, Marquette put together their best season in 10 years, lose 4 key players from that team, but it will be no
trouble to replace them?
I love to hear MU disparaging their own players, saying that a kid like Cadougan really wasn't that good. Well, he and the rest were good enough to get them to the Elite 8. I'd say those guys were pretty damn good. Replacing them, replacing their experience, their toughness, and the chemistry they had will be very difficult.
Bill Marsh wrote:MUSeashells&Balloons wrote:nycbefan wrote:Marquette is losing a lot more than their fans want to admit. Just making the tournament would be a good season for Marquette.
What are you smoking?
So, Marquette put together their best season in 10 years, lose 4 key players from that team, but it will be no
trouble to replace them?
I love to hear MU disparaging their own players, saying that a kid like Cadougan really wasn't that good. Well, he and the rest were good enough to get them to the Elite 8. I'd say those guys were pretty damn good. Replacing them, replacing their experience, their toughness, and the chemistry they had will be very difficult.
Westbrook36 wrote:And people were saying Nova fans were taking this too personal, might want to include Marquette and Georgetown fans in that basket.
As I said in another thread, you can tell the season's just around the corner, it's starting to heat up round here.
MU1717 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:MUSeashells&Balloons wrote:
What are you smoking?
So, Marquette put together their best season in 10 years, lose 4 key players from that team, but it will be no
trouble to replace them?
I love to hear MU disparaging their own players, saying that a kid like Cadougan really wasn't that good. Well, he and the rest were good enough to get them to the Elite 8. I'd say those guys were pretty damn good. Replacing them, replacing their experience, their toughness, and the chemistry they had will be very difficult.
You really have no idea what you are talking about do you? Who is this 4th key player you speak of? Also, how you perform in the tournament, more often than not, does not represent how good of a team you had. Many would say, me included, that the 2011-2012 with Crowder and Johnson-Odom along with the 2008-2009 team with James, McNeal, Matthews (which easily could have been a Final Four team had James not gotten injured) were far better and had far better players than the team we had last year. We had a very favorable Big East schedule which allowed us to tie for the Big East Title and we played a somewhat overrated Miami team that played a horrendous game against us allowing us to advance to the Elite 8.
Bill Marsh wrote:MU1717 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:So, Marquette put together their best season in 10 years, lose 4 key players from that team, but it will be no
trouble to replace them?
I love to hear MU disparaging their own players, saying that a kid like Cadougan really wasn't that good. Well, he and the rest were good enough to get them to the Elite 8. I'd say those guys were pretty damn good. Replacing them, replacing their experience, their toughness, and the chemistry they had will be very difficult.
You really have no idea what you are talking about do you? Who is this 4th key player you speak of? Also, how you perform in the tournament, more often than not, does not represent how good of a team you had. Many would say, me included, that the 2011-2012 with Crowder and Johnson-Odom along with the 2008-2009 team with James, McNeal, Matthews (which easily could have been a Final Four team had James not gotten injured) were far better and had far better players than the team we had last year. We had a very favorable Big East schedule which allowed us to tie for the Big East Title and we played a somewhat overrated Miami team that played a horrendous game against us allowing us to advance to the Elite 8.
Forget about the 4th player. I mistakenly thought that Otule was gone since he was a senior. It doesn't matter. They are losing 3 starters when a handful of other teams are returning 4-5 very talented starters
You're nitpicking about which was the best Marquette team. Let's just agree that they had their best finish since the Wade team. The point is that they had a very, very good year. Too many posters have downplayed the guys who are gone. A team doesn't tie for the Big East title and advance to the Elite 8 without the players who got them there being very, very good.
It's not simply plugging in new talent. It's about developing the chemistry and team work to function as a unit at a higher level than the competition. Why should I expect that a new crop of players will be able to put all of that together in just a few months when teams like Georgetown, Villanova, St. John's and Providence are each returning 4-5 starters who have had at least a year's head start of playing together as a unit to develop the necessary teamwork and chemistry?
aughnanure wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:MU1717 wrote:
You really have no idea what you are talking about do you? Who is this 4th key player you speak of? Also, how you perform in the tournament, more often than not, does not represent how good of a team you had. Many would say, me included, that the 2011-2012 with Crowder and Johnson-Odom along with the 2008-2009 team with James, McNeal, Matthews (which easily could have been a Final Four team had James not gotten injured) were far better and had far better players than the team we had last year. We had a very favorable Big East schedule which allowed us to tie for the Big East Title and we played a somewhat overrated Miami team that played a horrendous game against us allowing us to advance to the Elite 8.
Forget about the 4th player. I mistakenly thought that Otule was gone since he was a senior. It doesn't matter. They are losing 3 starters when a handful of other teams are returning 4-5 very talented starters
You're nitpicking about which was the best Marquette team. Let's just agree that they had their best finish since the Wade team. The point is that they had a very, very good year. Too many posters have downplayed the guys who are gone. A team doesn't tie for the Big East title and advance to the Elite 8 without the players who got them there being very, very good.
It's not simply plugging in new talent. It's about developing the chemistry and team work to function as a unit at a higher level than the competition. Why should I expect that a new crop of players will be able to put all of that together in just a few months when teams like Georgetown, Villanova, St. John's and Providence are each returning 4-5 starters who have had at least a year's head start of playing together as a unit to develop the necessary teamwork and chemistry?
Why are starters the be all end all for you? Marquette's arguably best player wasn't a starter at all and will probably not start this year either. Jae Crowder, BE POY, notoriously wasn't a starter for us to keep him out of foul trouble. Marquette legitimately played 9-10 deep last year. We would have whole line changes at times. So saying that our team hasn't played "together as a unit" is incorrect. Starters don't only play with starters, and most of the time do not.
We return 8 players from an Elite 8 and BE Champ team and 7 from teams who won 28 BE games the last two years and got to a Sweet 16 and an Elite 8. Six who have gone to 3 Sweet Sixteens. And these are not bench warmers either. But apparently returning 4-5 starters from teams that didn't make the tourney and went .500 or worse in conference is more important and convincing to you.
I just disagree I guess, but arguing is fun and a good sign for our league imo.
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