How about setting a screen outside and eventually getting the dunk.You mean move, look for the ball, and attack the rim. Can’t say I remember anyone like that in these parts for many years
How about setting a screen outside and eventually getting the dunk.You mean move, look for the ball, and attack the rim. Can’t say I remember anyone like that in these parts for many years
Jesse Edward's says hello!, and hold my dome foam while I make it soHow about setting a screen outside and eventually getting the dunk.
For an undersized post player, the second jump vertical is maybe more important than just a single vertical. If it takes a long time to reload and get back up in the air, the shorter guy is going to lose a lot of battles.If the 44in vertical is accurate, he actually out jumps Warrick.
Prior to the 2003 season, I remember reading McNeil actually had the higher jump and reach. I think it aways looked like Warrick got higher because of how long limbed and thin he was. He also got to display more on offense with his post game.
Imagine McNeil's athleticism with Otis Hill's skillset. He would've been an all-american
Melo’s 2nd jump was a thing of beautyFor an undersized post player, the second jump vertical is maybe more important than just a single vertical. If it takes a long time to reload and get back up in the air, the shorter guy is going to lose a lot of battles.
Bacot had 16 points in 17 minutes that season in a 40 point win. filipwoski and mitchell had a dunkathon on maliqs face all game long...No, maliq wasnt "fine" as a Center.Maliq Brown was just fine for us at center most games... But he was absolutely humiliated by Clemson because they pushed him wherever they wanted him and then laid it in right in his face over and over.
yeah, actually it was. hes not a center ...hes not a good center. good player but he couldnt come close to covering the post when he played for the Orange. lynn kidd from Va tech was like 8 of 9 shooting vs brown. he couldnt stop anyone good.This is all true, but Maliq had to shoulder the entire burden himself. The issue wasn't so much that Maliq couldn't hang,
UCLA dude supposedly has a 44 inch vert . I’m calling BS. Just like how they claim guys put on 20 lbs of muscle in a few months
Calling bs on that 6’9!!!! LolUCLA dude supposedly has a 44 inch vert . I’m calling BS. Just like how they claim guys put on 20 lbs of muscle in a few months
He better, since he’s built like an nba 2 guard!!!UCLA dude supposedly has a 44 inch vert . I’m calling BS. Just like how they claim guys put on 20 lbs of muscle in a few months
Diawara towers over him. As does Souare and even Sadiq may be a bit taller than him. Hopefully he can hold his own if he starts at center. He’s likely our best shot blocker, and lord knows we need that…
You can't trust heights and weights anyway. We won't start trusting reported vertical leaping or 40 times any time soon. Not until the NBA or NFL combine can you trust any of those reported figures.UCLA dude supposedly has a 44 inch vert . I’m calling BS. Just like how they claim guys put on 20 lbs of muscle in a few months
this is quite an obsession of yoursHe better, since he’s built like an nba 2 guard!!!
Got it, so we don't want long necks and short arms. We need Short necks and long arms.You can't trust heights and weights anyway. We won't start trusting reported vertical leaping or 40 times any time soon. Not until the NBA or NFL combine can you trust any of those reported figures.
But, looking at that picture, if Diawara is actually 7' (a big big if), that puts Souare at 6'10 and Kyle at maybe 6'8? He, White and Betsey seem the same height. Too bad we couldn't get Freeman in the comparative shot...
One thing that stands out is how short Diawara's neck is compared to the other guys. Somebody once commented when talking about Elton Brand back in the day, "You don't play basketball with the top of your head." A more useful measurement for basketball might be the shoulder rather than the top of the head. This is one reason teams are starting to use "standing reach" and "armspan" as a proxy for height when scouting. It doesn't matter how high your head is when standing still if your arms reach nine and a half feet into the sky when you reach up!
Look at where Diawara's shoulders are in comparison to the guys around him. His "useful height" relative to the other tall guys on the team is even higher than his listed additional height.
Wingspan, strength, timing, positioning, vertical, motor, IQ all factor in. What I noticed in UCLA DUDE film is he was dunking on 7’ guys from the Big10 and grabbing rebounds. Can he go toe to toe with a 7’2” monster, not sure. Will he allows us to press, play a switching defense, get blocks, steals and rebounds? Let’s see how it plays out. Assume he shares minutes with the other centers including Freeman. Like the upside he gives us.
You want dudes built like the broomsticks that the opposition teams would supposedly use in practices in preparation to facing our zoneGot it, so we don't want long necks and short arms. We need Short necks and long arms.
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Lol guiltythis is quite an obsession of yours
In terms of ability to block shots and protect the rim, wingspan and vertical have always been more relevant to coaches and scouts than height.You can't trust heights and weights anyway. We won't start trusting reported vertical leaping or 40 times any time soon. Not until the NBA or NFL combine can you trust any of those reported figures.
But, looking at that picture, if Diawara is actually 7' (a big big if), that puts Souare at 6'10 and Kyle at maybe 6'8? He, White and Betsey seem the same height. Too bad we couldn't get Freeman in the comparative shot...
One thing that stands out is how short Diawara's neck is compared to the other guys. Somebody once commented when talking about Elton Brand back in the day, "You don't play basketball with the top of your head." A more useful measurement for basketball might be the shoulder rather than the top of the head. This is one reason teams are starting to use "standing reach" and "armspan" as a proxy for height when scouting. It doesn't matter how high your head is when standing still if your arms reach nine and a half feet into the sky when you reach up!
Look at where Diawara's shoulders are in comparison to the guys around him. His "useful height" relative to the other tall guys on the team is even higher than his listed additional height.
In terms of ability to block shots and protect the rim, wingspan and vertical have always been more relevant to coaches and scouts than height.
You can't trust heights and weights anyway. We won't start trusting reported vertical leaping or 40 times any time soon. Not until the NBA or NFL combine can you trust any of those reported figures.
But, looking at that picture, if Diawara is actually 7' (a big big if), that puts Souare at 6'10 and Kyle at maybe 6'8? He, White and Betsey seem the same height. Too bad we couldn't get Freeman in the comparative shot...
One thing that stands out is how short Diawara's neck is compared to the other guys. Somebody once commented when talking about Elton Brand back in the day, "You don't play basketball with the top of your head." A more useful measurement for basketball might be the shoulder rather than the top of the head. This is one reason teams are starting to use "standing reach" and "armspan" as a proxy for height when scouting. It doesn't matter how high your head is when standing still if your arms reach nine and a half feet into the sky when you reach up!
Look at where Diawara's shoulders are in comparison to the guys around him. His "useful height" relative to the other tall guys on the team is even higher than his listed additional height.
Exactly. I never had any concerns with Jeremy McNeil playing center on defense. Kyle seems like a similar mold with a few less pounds and, from what I’m reading on this board, a higher ceiling as far as potential goes on O and D.In terms of ability to block shots and protect the rim, wingspan and vertical have always been more relevant to coaches and scouts than height.
Rick Jackson led the team with 2 blocks per game, followed by Wes Johnson at 1.8 and Arinze Onuaku at 1.1. The team averaged 6.6 blocks per game, which was 9th in the country back then and would have been .4 blocks per game ahead of UConn for best in the country last year.Yep. Just consider Wes Johnson vs. Arinze or Big Rick in 2010. I haven't looked it up, but I wouldn't be too surprised if Wesley had the most blocks on that team.
Rick Jackson led the team with 2 blocks per game, followed by Wes Johnson at 1.8 and Arinze Onuaku at 1.1. The team averaged 6.6 blocks per game, which was 9th in the country back then and would have been .4 blocks per game ahead of UConn for best in the country last year.
By block % though, the best shotblocker on the team was Dash Riley at 11.1%. Small sample sizes are fun.
Of the guys who actually played, they weren't great shotblockers by percentage.
Jackson 8.2, Johnson 5.7 and Onuaku 5.2.
James Southerland was at 7.9, like Riley, in very limited time.
To put it in perspective, McLeod led the team with 7.2% and Majstorovic was second at only 2.1 block%.
We were really bad at defense last season.
Good thing Kyle was at 10.2% playing in the Big 10 last season with UCLA.
Short or not, William Kyle will be a big upgrade defensively for us this season.