One year isn't going to do it here. Need to give him time.Now the excuses get to end. He's had a full recruiting year now.
One year isn't going to do it here. Need to give him time.Now the excuses get to end. He's had a full recruiting year now.
The fact that TT didn't play a ton on a team that desperately needed help in the front court should be a pretty strong indication of where the coaches felt he was on the learning curve.Next year there will be 4 (at least) freshmen + Battle, Fox and Ihnen, and presumably 2 or more portal guys who will surely be promised big minutes. Where does that leave Thompson?
Here is a guy who is nearly 7 feet tall, moves well and has decent ball skills and shooting ability. THIS was the year to give him some run and find out where he is on the learning curve. Next year there should be far more depth and he could slip further down the rotation.
We should just get rid of the board all together, no use talking about any of any of our coaches' decisions. They know best.How dare Ben think that he knows his team better than the posters on this board. Outrageous!
We should sit quietly at home and hope for the best.We should just get rid of the board all together, no use talking about any of any of our coaches' decisions. They know best.
Too soon.Here is a reprise post that I made last year. The same logic can be applied to Thiam, who played 49 minutes with 5 turnovers, shot 25%, with 0-6 from 3PT. He will likely never be a contributor in the B10.
At least with TT there are glimmers of hope. He had that Rutgers game where he was effective and played all 40 minutes. He shot 47%, with 40% from 3PT (6-15). He has a clear issue he can address -- putting on weight and getting stronger. And of the three players in my sample below, two were posts (who underwent some body transformation).
Repost:
When you see as little time as a freshman as Sam Freeman (30 minutes) and Martice Mitchell saw (23 minutes)...it's very unlikely you will ever contribute in the B10.
I did a deep dive study on the Gophers in the last 20 years: I arbitrarily picked <200 total minutes for freshmen to see who developed into a contributor later on in their career.
The only success stories I can find are:
Aaron Robinson: 134 minutes as a freshman, averaged 0.8 ppg and shot 20% from the field in 2001-2002. Stuck around and contributed as a solid PG his senior year, averaging 33 mpg, 8 ppg, 3 apg.
Jeff Hagen: played 194 minutes as a freshman, starter as a senior in 2004-2005 averaging 11 pts/6 rebs.
Mo Walker: conditioning was a major issue. Played 115 minutes as a freshman (198 as a soph), averaged 12/7 as a senior in 2014-2015.
Other guys who never were major contributors here after playing <200 min:
Wade Hokenson
Stan Gaines
Aliou Kane
Jonathan Williams (
Miles Webb
Kerry Wooldridge
Brandon Smith
Engen Nurumbi
Bryant Allen (not fair because he was football and partial season basketball...and then transferred to Illinois State for basketball..but he met the criteria of the search)
Wally Ellenson
Charles Buggs
Josh Martin (transferred partway through freshman year)
Gaston Diedhiou
Michael Hurt
Ahmad Gilbert (honorable mention, saw 295 minutes as a freshman and only 75 as a sophomore)
Jarvis Omersa (206 minutes, close enough!)
Bryan Greenlee (had a solid year at Florida Atlantic...hard to know what he would do here)
David Mutaf
Most notable other players are Justin Cobbs (played 363 forgettable minutes, and was a good player for Cal after redshirting/transferring) and Jamir Harris (played 394 minutes, now averaged 20 ppg for American and is transferring again as a 5th year senior). Mo Hargrow also only played 394 minutes his freshman year but was a solid contributor the next 3 years. If you stretch my 20 year window a few years back you could also count Dusty Rychart, although he was a walk-on which IMO is a different story.
Long story short: let's not twist ourselves into pretzels over the fact these guys are transferring. For the most part, if you aren't competitive enough to break the rotation even a little bit as a freshman...your chances of ever contributing in the B10 are pretty slim. If I missed anybody, please let me know and I can update my list.
Yeah, at the end of the 1st half putting in Luke L was puzzling. but ok.or for any bench player last night …
Every available player was brought in by Ben with exception of TT, who Ben must have encouraged to stay.
The iron 5 have it all they had. Ben failed them too last night in the most baffling display of Gopher (non) coaching I have ever seen.
Haha, I remember you being a big fan?Too soon.
this has to be the case. It really does set the expectations Ben has from day 1. We should see progress right away then next seasonI think the predominant theme for the first year could have been culture and style of play.
It was obvious that they were short handed and played very few players, but let's look at it from another point of view. This is just my guess from a distance with no direct information.
Let's say the coach tells a player that they need to improve certain parts of their game (defense, etc.) before they can play. As the year goes on that player keeps making mistakes in practice and doesn't seem to be improving enough to get PT. What signal and lesson does it show if the coach still gives that player significant playing time without making the improvements? Does the team still listen to the coach or do they know that the coach will play guys he needs even if they ignore him?
It could just be a case where none of the players on the bench have earned PT. Coach could be sending a strong message that PT is not given, it is earned.
That is alarming. What player doesn’t want to play? To me, it strongly suggests he lost the team. Clearly the bench could tell that their teammates were gassed. If the Strib report is accurate, I would expect both TT and Thiam will be entering the portal soon.This is how STrib reported it:
Johnson said he looked to put in his reserves at times during the game, but they told him to stick with the starting lineup.
"Guys knew we were playing well, and they wanted the guys to keep fighting," Johnson said. "I think that's what our team has been all year. They're about the right stuff. They're the true definition of a team. It hurts to end. And we all wish we had one more day.
I don't see it with TT. And where would he go, St Thomas?That is alarming. What player doesn’t want to play? To me, it strongly suggests he lost the team. Clearly the bench could tell that their teammates were gassed. If the Strib report is accurate, I would expect both TT and Thiam will be entering the portal soon.
A 7’ kid with 3 years of eligibility left has many options. Hedstrom went from WI to Valpo, I think, last year for example.I don't see it with TT. And where would he go, St Thomas?
Diffident Ben. ‘Anyone wanna play?’This is how STrib reported it:
Unfortunately for Johnson, the Gophers were also not at full strength going into the Big Ten tournament opener Wednesday night, leading to a quick exit in a 60-51 loss in the rematch against the Nittany Lions at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
Jamison Battle had a team-high 19 points, but the Gophers (13-17) didn't have energy to extend their season with the starters playing all but one minute for the first time this season.
Johnson said he looked to put in his reserves at times during the game, but they told him to stick with the starting lineup.
"Guys knew we were playing well, and they wanted the guys to keep fighting," Johnson said. "I think that's what our team has been all year. They're about the right stuff. They're the true definition of a team. It hurts to end. And we all wish we had one more day."
Gophers third-leading scorer E.J. Stephens was sidelined by a migraine. Sean Sutherlin replaced Stephens in the starting lineup, but that took away their top player off the bench.
"Going down with a migraine literally an hour before the game you feel for him," Johnson said of Stephens. "He was super locked in all week. He didn't want it to end as far as the season."
Johnson had the shortest rotation among all high major programs in the regular season, but Stephens playing one minute was the fewest the bench had played all year. Logging those heavy minutes finally seemed to wear down the Gophers down the stretch.
Very interesting. I, like you, didn’t think it actually happened. Guess I was wrong. Find it hard to believe someone would not want to play. Astounds me.I didn't take Ben's statement about the bench players literally.
IMO it was just a throwaway line in in the halftime interview...it that actually happened, it's obviously very concerning.
Judging from Daniels body language on the bench last night, I find it very hard to believe that he wasn't interesting in playing.
If the players are making these kinds of decisions, perhaps we don’t don’t need a head coach?This is how STrib reported it:
Johnson said he looked to put in his reserves at times during the game, but they told him to stick with the starting lineup.
Lack of trust based on what said players displayed in practice and in limited game time? Do you subject yourself to a dentist you do not trust because he deserves an opportunity?The player rotations (non-rotations) is the one red flag from the season. This indicates a lack of trust; lack of player development; and stubbornness. Surely playing only five or six guys did not give the team its best chance to win last night or probably during the season. A big thank you to the players. They gave it all they had.
If anyone is transferring out, we will probably hear soon. Seems like some of these kids barely get off the bus ride home before they announce.That is alarming. What player doesn’t want to play? To me, it strongly suggests he lost the team. Clearly the bench could tell that their teammates were gassed. If the Strib report is accurate, I would expect both TT and Thiam will be entering the portal soon.
I doubt very much TT has a bad attitude or skips class and is late for practice. From what little we can see his attitude is great and he probably understands his limited playing time much better than posters here.With his redshirt already gone, and everyone saying "why the heck didn't you play TT more??", there has to be a reason or reasons something like what you say here.
There has to be more to it that we fans don't know. Bad attitude in practice? Late to meetings, skipping class? I pulled those out of my rear end as hypotheticals, I have no info.
If I have an abscess tooth and I need to get it pulled, yes I do. It's not an ideal situation to pick a dentist at random but when you have a desperate need, you make do.Lack of trust based on what said players displayed in practice and in limited game time? Do you subject yourself to a dentist you do not trust because he deserves an opportunity?
Lack of development because the base line was too low? Maybe a couple of guys did develop a bit in practice but not to a level where they could contribute positively on the floor rather than negatively.
Yes, he could have played Daniels, TT, Thiam, Kern, and Brams five minutes each last night to rest the starters. At what cost? How many additional points would PS have scored during their respective times on the floor? How many less points would Minnesota have scored having Battle on the bench?
Any coach knows it is nearly impossible to win a game with five players. That Ben elected to try to win with five players tells you what you need to know about his trust level of the guys on the bench. There was no McBrayer or Trevor Winter sitting there.
Whatever anyone wants to say about Ben Johnson and his coaching style, one thing is indisputable: he tried to win every game this year.
Here is a reprise post that I made last year. The same logic can be applied to Thiam, who played 49 minutes with 5 turnovers, shot 25%, with 0-6 from 3PT. He will likely never be a contributor in the B10.
At least with TT there are glimmers of hope. He had that Rutgers game where he was effective and played all 40 minutes. He shot 47%, with 40% from 3PT (6-15). He has a clear issue he can address -- putting on weight and getting stronger. And of the three players in my sample below, two were posts (who underwent some body transformation).
As an update, Sam Freeman averaged 4 pts and 3 rebounds in 12 minutes per game at Pacific. Martice Mitchell was supposed to transfer to Northern Illinois but never showed up on the roster. So I think that research was validated.
Repost:
When you see as little time as a freshman as Sam Freeman (30 minutes) and Martice Mitchell saw (23 minutes)...it's very unlikely you will ever contribute in the B10.
I did a deep dive study on the Gophers in the last 20 years: I arbitrarily picked <200 total minutes for freshmen to see who developed into a contributor later on in their career.
The only success stories I can find are:
Aaron Robinson: 134 minutes as a freshman, averaged 0.8 ppg and shot 20% from the field in 2001-2002. Stuck around and contributed as a solid PG his senior year, averaging 33 mpg, 8 ppg, 3 apg.
Jeff Hagen: played 194 minutes as a freshman, starter as a senior in 2004-2005 averaging 11 pts/6 rebs.
Mo Walker: conditioning was a major issue. Played 115 minutes as a freshman (198 as a soph), averaged 12/7 as a senior in 2014-2015.
Other guys who never were major contributors here after playing <200 min:
Wade Hokenson
Stan Gaines
Aliou Kane
Jonathan Williams (
Miles Webb
Kerry Wooldridge
Brandon Smith
Engen Nurumbi
Bryant Allen (not fair because he was football and partial season basketball...and then transferred to Illinois State for basketball..but he met the criteria of the search)
Wally Ellenson
Charles Buggs
Josh Martin (transferred partway through freshman year)
Gaston Diedhiou
Michael Hurt
Ahmad Gilbert (honorable mention, saw 295 minutes as a freshman and only 75 as a sophomore)
Jarvis Omersa (206 minutes, close enough!)
Bryan Greenlee (had a solid year at Florida Atlantic...hard to know what he would do here)
David Mutaf
Most notable other players are Justin Cobbs (played 363 forgettable minutes, and was a good player for Cal after redshirting/transferring) and Jamir Harris (played 394 minutes, now averaged 20 ppg for American and is transferring again as a 5th year senior). Mo Hargrow also only played 394 minutes his freshman year but was a solid contributor the next 3 years. If you stretch my 20 year window a few years back you could also count Dusty Rychart, although he was a walk-on which IMO is a different story.
Long story short: let's not twist ourselves into pretzels over the fact these guys are transferring. For the most part, if you aren't competitive enough to break the rotation even a little bit as a freshman...your chances of ever contributing in the B10 are pretty slim. If I missed anybody, please let me know and I can update my list.
Agreed.If the players are making these kinds of decisions, perhaps we don’t don’t need a head coach?
This is it. Leadership has no place for diffidence.If the players are making these kinds of decisions, perhaps we don’t don’t need a head coach?