TinyManInside
Our only goal will be the western shores.
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2011
- Messages
- 2,789
- Like
- 9,552
Just make sure they don't play the following songs:
Not For You
Rearviewmirror
Go
Leash
Why Go
Dissident
Last Exit
Very clever post.
Just make sure they don't play the following songs:
Not For You
Rearviewmirror
Go
Leash
Why Go
Dissident
Last Exit
I did a little digging through the old record books... and to find a kid who improved steadily from year 1 through year 3, I had to go all the way back to a guy named... Frank Howard. 1.6 ppg/1.8 apg/10.5 mpg as a freshman, 4.5 ppg/3.6 apg/16.2 mpg as a sophomore, 14.4 ppg/4.7 apg/38.4 mpg as a junior. Love him or hate him (and at times I was squarely in each camp), he improved significantly - and I will always believe that his pre-season injury was the biggest reason why last year was a disappointment.Also, when is the last time Boeheim brought a kid along from 3.5 to 8.5 to 15 ppg over a 3 year stretch. Player development is an important tool in any coaching arsenal.
I did a little digging through the old record books... and to find a kid who improved steadily from year 1 through year 3, I had to go all the way back to a guy named... Frank Howard. 1.6 ppg/1.8 apg/10.5 mpg as a freshman, 4.5 ppg/3.6 apg/16.2 mpg as a sophomore, 14.4 ppg/4.7 apg/38.4 mpg as a junior. Love him or hate him (and at times I was squarely in each camp), he improved significantly - and I will always believe that his pre-season injury was the biggest reason why last year was a disappointment.
Before Frank, I had to go all the way back to... Michael Gbinije. 1.7 ppg/0.2 apg/5.8 mpg as a freshman (at Duke, obviously), 3.4 ppg/1.2 apg/14.6 mpg as a redshirt sophomore, 12.7 ppg/3.6 apg/35.0 mpg as a junior, and finally a great senior year with 17.5 ppg/4.3 apg/37.9 mpg. There weren't many of us who watched him struggle during the 2013-14 season that thought that he would be the leading scorer on a Final Four team just 2 years later...
If you want to make the argument that we haven't developed frontcourt players the same way in recent years, that might be a valid criticism. But even if that's the case - who are you really referring to? Moyer? Chukwu? Dajuan? Tyler Roberson is probably the best recent example of a frontcourt player that didn't develop the way we all hoped. I guess if you want to pin that on Boeheim, you can - I don't know how you separate the blame (if that's even the right word) between the player and the coach, though.
I did a little digging through the old record books... and to find a kid who improved steadily from year 1 through year 3, I had to go all the way back to a guy named... Frank Howard. 1.6 ppg/1.8 apg/10.5 mpg as a freshman, 4.5 ppg/3.6 apg/16.2 mpg as a sophomore, 14.4 ppg/4.7 apg/38.4 mpg as a junior. Love him or hate him (and at times I was squarely in each camp), he improved significantly - and I will always believe that his pre-season injury was the biggest reason why last year was a disappointment.
Before Frank, I had to go all the way back to... Michael Gbinije. 1.7 ppg/0.2 apg/5.8 mpg as a freshman (at Duke, obviously), 3.4 ppg/1.2 apg/14.6 mpg as a redshirt sophomore, 12.7 ppg/3.6 apg/35.0 mpg as a junior, and finally a great senior year with 17.5 ppg/4.3 apg/37.9 mpg. There weren't many of us who watched him struggle during the 2013-14 season that thought that he would be the leading scorer on a Final Four team just 2 years later...
If you want to make the argument that we haven't developed frontcourt players the same way in recent years, that might be a valid criticism. But even if that's the case - who are you really referring to? Moyer? Chukwu? Dajuan? Tyler Roberson is probably the best recent example of a frontcourt player that didn't develop the way we all hoped. I guess if you want to pin that on Boeheim, you can - I don't know how you separate the blame (if that's even the right word) between the player and the coach, though.
I'm sure Hopkins had a big part in Gbinije's development... I just don't think it's fair to question "when's the last time Boeheim developed a kid?" (with the clear insinuation being that SU hasn't developed kids in recent years, which is simply not true) - and then pivot to "well, the staff really deserves the credit".Good point on Frank Howard, he did show a lot progress especially between SO and JR years. Doesn’t change the fact that Hop’s player development across the board at UW has been very evident. You could easily make the argument that Gbinijie’s development was also heavily influenced by Hopkins, seeing as he basically ran the team on a day-to-day basis other than gameday.