Which Gophers did you miss on badly - you thought XYZ Gopher would be much better or much worse?

Great thread Bleed, here's my go at it. . .

Royce White. If he possessed even a 25 cent head, the whole Tubby Smith era could have taken a much different path and the abyss the program has been for the better part of the post-Haskins era might have been tempered.

Ernest Nzigamasabo. I blame Sid for my overblown expectations--I recall reading in his jottings about the spectacular 6'9" arrival to Mounds View (?) with a silky handle and deep range jumper. Never came to be.

Jayson Walton. A top flight recruit from Dallas who, if memory serves, was plagued by bad knees that limited his considerable potential in the post-Burton, pre-FF Gopher era. Came in with Voshon, David Grim, and Chad Kolander, when Ariel McDonald, Townsend Orr and Randy Carter were sophomores (had to look it up). What a team that could have been if Walton wasn't limited.

Moe Hargrow. NIL movement before NIL existed.

On the other side. . .
The entire 2004-05 Gopher squad-Jeff Hagen, Aaron Robinson, Brent Lawson, J'son Stamper, and Vincent Grier. The shining light of the Monson era, when much more heralded recruits and transfers back to MN lead to disappointment, this collection of unknowns and bench warmers in the early years of their career blossomed into an NCAA tournament squad.

Traverus Bennett. A lightly regarded JUCO in the Rickert/Holman/Bauer/Burleson years, when such promise slipped from the fingertips he was steady on both sides of the ball, which couldn't be said often about his teammates.

Walter Bond and Kevin Lynch. Minnesota wasn't exactly a hotbed of D-1 level recruits when Lynch came onto the scene and Bond looked chubby and undersized, but both balled out and supplemented the Burton/Newburn/Coffey/Shik quartet to almost push us into the Final 4 so quickly after the near decimation of the program.
He's a motivational speaker now.
 


2009-2010 Team, the parts were better than the team.
It had wing scorers Westbrook and Hoffarber and D joseph, center's Sampson and Colt, and Freshmen Rodney W., Cobbs, Nolen, and it had super defender Damian Johnson who became better than I expected. 10 solid players but the team was an enigma. Obviously, Sampson had a wing mentality in a 6-11 frame.

Better once these players left the gophers: Iverson had a bad rep with the reps in the big ten, became an all mtn west guy at CSU. Joseph also left and went all conf at Oregon, Cobbs all conf at Cal.
this is the way I remember it--- The Iverson reputation with the refs started with a Michigan State game- Iverson gets a rebound, chins and turns to find an outlet guy, Draymond Green (yes, this is where I started to dislike Draymond) goes down like he was shot several times by big guns) they give Colton a T-- to me, it looked like the replay showed Draymond getting missed by about 6 inches- but there was no review back then, and it seemed like Colton was in foul trouble until he left the Big Ten. Played for the Celtics for a minute too.
 

Had an ok career, but he underachieved.
49th ranked overall recruit and 9th best SF.

SF at 6-7 makes sense, I remember hearing about him being a SG? In those days, there was a difference in size and skill between SG and SF. SG were your best shooters and scorers, and most were 6-3 to 6-5. SF some could shoot, they had more size then today, usually at least 6-6.

He cant shoot and he wasn't a very good ball handler, so I never understood the need to call him a SG.
 

He's a motivational speaker now.

Great thread Bleed, here's my go at it. . .

Royce White. If he possessed even a 25 cent head, the whole Tubby Smith era could have taken a much different path and the abyss the program has been for the better part of the post-Haskins era might have been tempered.

Ernest Nzigamasabo. I blame Sid for my overblown expectations--I recall reading in his jottings about the spectacular 6'9" arrival to Mounds View (?) with a silky handle and deep range jumper. Never came to be.

Jayson Walton. A top flight recruit from Dallas who, if memory serves, was plagued by bad knees that limited his considerable potential in the post-Burton, pre-FF Gopher era. Came in with Voshon, David Grim, and Chad Kolander, when Ariel McDonald, Townsend Orr and Randy Carter were sophomores (had to look it up). What a team that could have been if Walton wasn't limited.

Moe Hargrow. NIL movement before NIL existed.

On the other side. . .
The entire 2004-05 Gopher squad-Jeff Hagen, Aaron Robinson, Brent Lawson, J'son Stamper, and Vincent Grier. The shining light of the Monson era, when much more heralded recruits and transfers back to MN lead to disappointment, this collection of unknowns and bench warmers in the early years of their career blossomed into an NCAA tournament squad.

Traverus Bennett. A lightly regarded JUCO in the Rickert/Holman/Bauer/Burleson years, when such promise slipped from the fingertips he was steady on both sides of the ball, which couldn't be said often about his teammates.

Walter Bond and Kevin Lynch. Minnesota wasn't exactly a hotbed of D-1 level recruits when Lynch came onto the scene and Bond looked chubby and undersized, but both balled out and supplemented the Burton/Newburn/Coffey/Shik quartet to almost push us into the Final 4 so quickly after the near decimation of the program.
That 04-05 team, talk about over-achievers! Vincent Grier could really take over a game on offense. This team really locked you down on defense. "Vincent and the nobody's!" tribute to Kansas.
 



Jayson Walton probably the most highly ranked whose career didn’t match his ranking. Going back Trent Tucker was far from the most heralded recruit in the class with Daryl Mitchell, Leo Rauntins, and Cookie Holmes but was arguably the best .
 

Jayson Walton probably the most highly ranked whose career didn’t match his ranking. Going back Trent Tucker was far from the most heralded recruit in the class with Daryl Mitchell, Leo Rauntins, and Cookie Holmes but was arguably the best .
Walton was such an explosive player who may have been a big star if he hadn't blown his knee out. He wasn't the same after that.
 





Add Jarvis Omersa to the enigma list. Seemed to be raw, but super athletic with a high ceiling. Have to assume something else was at play given the transfer to St. Thomas that never transpired and a subsequent fall of the map status.
 

He's a motivational speaker now.
I got to listen to Walter speak one time, really enjoyed him. Many references to the Gophers and Haskins. I got to talk with him afterwards, nice guy. Too bad he missed most of his senior year with an injury.
 




Definitely Jelly.

Other side of the coin, Westbrook. Thought he'd be decent, but by the end of his career he was much better than that. What I really liked is he had a little bit of "a*s hole" in him. Gopher program needs guys like Westbrook a little more often. ... tough & had no fear.
 

Definitely Jelly.

Other side of the coin, Westbrook. Thought he'd be decent, but by the end of his career he was much better than that. What I really liked is he had a little bit of "a*s hole" in him. Gopher program needs guys like Westbrook a little more often. ... tough & had no fear.
More than a little….
 



How about Voshon Lenard? He was certainly well thought of out of high school in Detroit. But I think he outdid expectations. And he helped us beat the Fab Five! All he did was score more points than any other player in Minnesota history.
 




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