Guys Who Transfer Aren't As Good As Good As They Thought.

Dahlman surprisingly brought a lot to the table and was well respected by Izzo and his teammates. Instead of wasting away on the bench, he became a high energy player-coach that others fed of off. While he wasn't helping the team on the court, he sure as hell probably contributed more to the team than a kid getting ~8mpg scoring 2.0ppg. Not sure if he was worth a full scholarship for that, but I'm saying that he made the most out of it.

I'd say he contributed 8mpg and 2.0ppg less than this fictitious MSU player
 

Still making my point... he contributed far less than the average Izzo recruit. Thus, it would've benefited the team if he gave his scholarship up.

Dahlman surprisingly brought a lot to the table and was well respected by Izzo and his teammates. Instead of wasting away on the bench, he became a high energy player-coach that others fed of off. While he wasn't helping the team on the court, he sure as hell probably contributed more to the team than a kid getting ~8mpg scoring 2.0ppg. Not sure if he was worth a full scholarship for that, but I'm saying that he made the most out of it.
 


I'm sure the chemistry he added to the team was indispensable. You can never overstate the importance of the 13th man--especially considering Izzo probably would've brought in a terrible recruit as a replacement (like usual).

Have you ever heard of a thing called team chemistry??????
 

Chemistry..........the practice of mixing things together and see if they blow up.
 





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