HoosierPal wrote:I agree with most of what you say, except that I believe we will miss Brown. The only bench player who can possibly stretch the floor will be Etherington. And he only averaged 2.0 ppg last year with IU. It is hard to pencil Etherington in for even high single figure scoring. Brown hit 30 three pointers, and was a threat every time he touched the ball. Without Brown, we HAVE to have Austin contribute at least as much as Brown did last year at 6.8 pg.
Etherington hasn't shown in three years that he can make it through a season reasonably healthy, and as you know he is already injured. I for one believe we will miss Brown immensely.
I think we will miss Fromm's leadership more than most think. When he lost his starting job, he kept his head in the game and provided stability off the bench. He also could stretch the floor, particularly for a big man. I'm not sure who will fill his slot.
I totally agree with Aldridge being a good citizen and great teammate.
Irishdawg wrote:HoosierPal wrote:I agree with most of what you say, except that I believe we will miss Brown. The only bench player who can possibly stretch the floor will be Etherington. And he only averaged 2.0 ppg last year with IU. It is hard to pencil Etherington in for even high single figure scoring. Brown hit 30 three pointers, and was a threat every time he touched the ball. Without Brown, we HAVE to have Austin contribute at least as much as Brown did last year at 6.8 pg.
Etherington hasn't shown in three years that he can make it through a season reasonably healthy, and as you know he is already injured. I for one believe we will miss Brown immensely.
I think we will miss Fromm's leadership more than most think. When he lost his starting job, he kept his head in the game and provided stability off the bench. He also could stretch the floor, particularly for a big man. I'm not sure who will fill his slot.
I totally agree with Aldridge being a good citizen and great teammate.
Brown had an offensive efficiency rating of 88.3 (an "average" offensive player is 100), which other than Aldridge was the worst on the team among the regulars. Neither he nor Fromm were serious threats on the offensive end of the floor, and while they might have hit 3's during the season, neither did so at an impressive enough clip (Brown 26%, Fromm 24.6%) to where I would consider trying to take that shot away from them. I wish Brown well at New Mexico because it seemed like he said all the right things, but he was playing out of position last season and he also made a lot of boneheaded decisions both offensively and defensively that hurt the team during games. I agree that Fromm's leadership will be missed, but I think a guy like Barlow can take on that role.
I actually think that Kelan Martin will get minutes ahead of Etherington (especially with his injury), and I don't think Austin will be looked to do much beyond what he did well at IU, which was play defense and do the little things as well as he can. Martin's outside shot is inconsistent, but IMO, he's far more of a threat to score than anyone else that may come off the bench. Jackson Davis is skilled, but needs to add some strength in order to utilize that at this level of basketball, but he's smart and makes winning plays even if he's not scoring. Tyler Wideman has completely revamped his body from the end of his HS Jr. season until now. His offensive game needs some work, but this kid is big and athletic and should be a good presence on the defensive end of the floor once he learns Butler's rotations and hedging.
I think Butler's a year away from challenging for an NCAA bid, but that's just my opinion. Looking forward to this season either way.
stever20 wrote:One thing Bill- if you are seeded 12 and in a PIG, you have an extra round to get to that sweet 16.
My point is I'll take the odds on having years where we get 2,3,7,10 seeds 100% of the time over years where we are 3,10,10, 12 and in PIG. It's asinine to say anything other than that. Yes exceptions can happen. But they are just that, exceptions. You are making it sound Bill like the seeds are random and don't matter. While folks want to make March out to be like that, the reality is it's not. The seeds really do matter. I mean just as an example- 40 6 seeds have been to the sweet 16 in the last 30 years. Only 20 7 seeds have been. You have to go out and win, but I'll take a better seed over a weaker seed all of the time(except as our Creighton fans know- when it's between a 8/9 seed and a 10 seed).
Also, I would note that one of Butlers 2 years, they were a #5 seed. That is hardly a bad seed. Only VCU of the 3 you mentioned was lower than a 9 seed. Lower than a 9 seed has made the elite 8 11 times, and final 4 3 times. Sweet 16 in the 10-12 range(because we will never be 13-16 seed)- 59 times. Sweet 16 in the 5-7 range though- 99 times.
stever20 wrote:hoyahooligan wrote:I think 4 is the least amount of teams we get in yearly. So I think that's the over under line. Anything less than that would be failure, anything more than that success. I think going forward we'll be getting 5 in pretty regularly and 6 on occasion.
with the double round robin schedule- getting 5 or 6 is a very difficult thing. Last year was pretty much best case scenario for final league standings- with 5 seed being 10-8 and 6 seed being 9-9. To get 5-6 in, we have to dominate in the OOC schedule. The 5th or 6 seed going 10-8 or 9-9 can't have more than 2 OOC losses and feel comfortable. The #7 Big 12 team got in even with a 8-10 conference record because they were 12-1 OOC.
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