Jaymil brings up very good points. I recall when he was originally recruited he said he was brought in as SF. We asked Jimmy Chitwood and he said he thought he would start as a SF and over time grow into a PF. I believe he came on campus at 185 lbs. and his playing weight, not quite 2 years later is roughly 205-210 lbs. I'm not sure any one really knows, but I believe we need to see him on the floor next season in some capacity.
that is correct. I think you can call him a stretch 4 or a big 3...either one. Offensively, he reminds me most of Kevin Durant (not saying that good - style) and Quincy Miller. but I think he will need to defend more in the post with strength than either of those players were asked to. the BiG is very physical.
the keys to me are that:
Pitino felt that he needed additional weight to defend and rebound at the 4, which is accurate.
Offensively, he is going to be best/most effective facing up, not necessarily back to the basket. not to say that he shouldnt be continually improving in that area, just that I personally would not be looking to isolate Charles in the post (although there could certainly be match ups where this could be a favorable mismatch).
Overall, he has needed to add weight in order to handle the physicality of the league and to defend. Offensively, I dont think that Pitinio necessarily means that he needs weight so that he can start posting up. Most of his points will still come from jumpers and face ups, and I believe most of his scoring around the rim will be off passes, rebounds, and running the floor (as opposed to isolations in the post)
I can also totally understand the "bad wow" moments that they have seen along with the good wows - 100%. he was dunking and hitting 3's one minute, and making some very poor errors and losing confidence the next when we coached him. it appears that he has continued to progress and progress, and hopefully is ready to reach that full potential that many coaches/fans have seen glimpses of at various times.
these were my comments on position in 2011:
GH: What kind player is Minnesota getting in Charles Buggs?
SD: I would say that for someone his size he is extremely skilled and versatile. His best basketball is ahead of him. He can shoot and score, but he’s often too unselfish. He’s a very good passer. He needs to put on weight to bang in the Big Ten. But he’s a very hard worker and always getting better. He has a lot of upside. His development has professional potential. He’s a very good kid, super nice, very quiet.
GH: What position will he be at the Big Ten level?
SD: Offensively he’s more of a face up guy. To defend at the PF he needs to get bigger. He’s very long and that helps. He’ll start out more at the 3 but as he progresses he’ll be able to guard 4s. Offensively he is ready to play both. Mike Anderson and Tubby Smith both really wanted him because he can run the floor very well.