Some of your basketball takes are almost as bad as your Russian foreign policy takes.
We just won a national title with DH as our starting PG.
We don't need NBA players at all 5 positions.
Some of your basketball takes are almost as bad as your Russian foreign policy takes.
No question. Very few guards, maybe none, have gone through here without turning into a pretty good defender. Even Remy looked hopeless and then looked pretty good in a matter of months, even while injured--made the biggest defensive play of the tournament. Defense a lot about effort, focus, intensity, and even the skills/footwork are teachable.KUTradition wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 3:30 pmis it really though?CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 3:16 pmAnd the latter is much harder to replace.ousdahl wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 3:07 pm
I don't wanna think about that, either! didn't mean to discredit DH.
But the thing is, we don't have to replace the role of DH and his defense for likely the next 3 years.
what we do have to replace, is that smooth sipping cognac of a scoring pg to complement him.
With that said, i think we all hope to see a much improved version of dajuan next year. He should be able to improve his body at least. Add some weight, improve his strength/athlecism. That should be the easy part cause I know he will put in the workBasketballJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 6:25 pmSome of your basketball takes are almost as bad as your Russian foreign policy takes.
We just won a national title with DH as our starting PG.
We don't need NBA players at all 5 positions.
Absolutely. His % is decent. He doesn't need to be Trae Young, but he does need to continue to be a threat either by shooting or attacking when they try to play off him. This year he became that. Obviously helped having Och and DMac. I think he will continue to improve. And I think Yesufu and Cuffe can fill the scoring/ballhandling void left by Remy. Yesufu looked good next to DH. Even though that's a smaller backcourt, I think it can work. I do not expect DH to play Frank/Devonte minutes. I think he'll be in that 30min range like he was this year. He's improved a ton since he's been here. No reason to think it'll stop now. Same goes for Yesufu. I think he'll look like a new man come November.randylahey wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 8:55 pmWith that said, i think we all hope to see a much improved version of dajuan next year. He should be able to improve his body at least. Add some weight, improve his strength/athlecism. That should be the easy part cause I know he will put in the workBasketballJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 6:25 pmSome of your basketball takes are almost as bad as your Russian foreign policy takes.
We just won a national title with DH as our starting PG.
We don't need NBA players at all 5 positions.
Obviously he's going to be working on his shot. Itll be interesting to see how much it improves over the rest of his career here
eh…one could argue that the “effort, focus, [and] intensity” required to be an elite defender is either in the player or it’s notCrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 6:55 pmNo question. Very few guards, maybe none, have gone through here without turning into a pretty good defender. Even Remy looked hopeless and then looked pretty good in a matter of months, even while injured--made the biggest defensive play of the tournament. Defense a lot about effort, focus, intensity, and even the skills/footwork are teachable.
Try turning Dajuan or Marcus Garrett into a microwave off the bounce scorer. You can't. Och spent 4 years here, consensus AA, athletic as hell, and still was never a consistent threat driving to score. That kind of stuff is either in the player or its not.
I think it's tougher to fix a shot or improve a players burst to the basket than to teach good defense.KUTradition wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 7:53 ameh…one could argue that the “effort, focus, [and] intensity” required to be an elite defender is either in the player or it’s notCrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 6:55 pmDefense a lot about effort, focus, intensity, and even the skills/footwork are teachable.
Well you can't effort yourself into becoming a good scorer. Defender, you can, and every guard that comes through here has the athleticism to become a good defender.KUTradition wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 7:53 ameh…one could argue that the “effort, focus, [and] intensity” required to be an elite defender is either in the player or it’s notCrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 6:55 pmNo question. Very few guards, maybe none, have gone through here without turning into a pretty good defender. Even Remy looked hopeless and then looked pretty good in a matter of months, even while injured--made the biggest defensive play of the tournament. Defense a lot about effort, focus, intensity, and even the skills/footwork are teachable.
Try turning Dajuan or Marcus Garrett into a microwave off the bounce scorer. You can't. Och spent 4 years here, consensus AA, athletic as hell, and still was never a consistent threat driving to score. That kind of stuff is either in the player or its not.
i’m not necessarily disagreeing that elite offensive players might be more rare, but i don’t think the gap is all that large
I know it's probably not what you meant by "good," but a guy like Jalen efforts himself into at least half his points. This is very much meant as a compliment to Jalen as a college player (but is also why he will have a very chilly NBA reception, even if he comes back and scores 20/game).CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 8:24 amWell you can't effort yourself into becoming a good scorer. Defender, you can, and every guard that comes through here has the athleticism to become a good defender.KUTradition wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 7:53 ameh…one could argue that the “effort, focus, [and] intensity” required to be an elite defender is either in the player or it’s notCrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Tue Apr 12, 2022 6:55 pm
No question. Very few guards, maybe none, have gone through here without turning into a pretty good defender. Even Remy looked hopeless and then looked pretty good in a matter of months, even while injured--made the biggest defensive play of the tournament. Defense a lot about effort, focus, intensity, and even the skills/footwork are teachable.
Try turning Dajuan or Marcus Garrett into a microwave off the bounce scorer. You can't. Och spent 4 years here, consensus AA, athletic as hell, and still was never a consistent threat driving to score. That kind of stuff is either in the player or its not.
i’m not necessarily disagreeing that elite offensive players might be more rare, but i don’t think the gap is all that large
And then in the context of my original point, the rarity of an elite one-on-one scorer increases their value making them harder to replace. On a play-by-play level, good offense always beats good defense, it's just the nature of the sport.