I don't expect a lot of people to agree with me but Nolen is to big of a liability on offense. While he is a good passer and has good handles, I think he is slightly over rated on D. Furthermore he puts us in such a huge hole on offense. When he has the ball the defender can sag so far off him it kills our screens, and Jumbles our inside game, making it even tougher on our entry passes. Devoe needs to play point
You are right. I don't agree. If the Gophers hope to make it out of the BT tournament and into the Big Dance, they need both Joseph AND Nolen.
Well, here's one guy who agrees with you. I posted the same thing in about 3 threads yesterday.
The apologists and Joseph-haters will be all over this, but the simple facts are just as you say. Nolen is a net negative, particularly on a team starving for scorers.
What this team really could use is a true, top-50 point guard. But since they don't have one, the best available option is letting Devoe get 30-35 mpg. The defense won't be much, if any worse, and the offense, which is the team's true problem area, will be better.
Dr. Don may (or may not) have a drinking problem, but on a basketball fan site your problem is worse--a serious inability to understand the game of basketball.
For example, let's discuss your theory of "net negative". The Gophers were undefeated and won a significant non-con tourney (Puerto Rico) with Nolen sans Joseph. The Gophers have lost three games this year in which Joseph has played (Virginia, MSU, Wisconsin). The Gophers lost two games with Nolen (Wisconsin, MSU)--both after coming off a significant injury that is probably not fully healed.
Net negative: Joseph
Let's get even more specific on your "net negative" theory (you'll need some video tape for this one). The difference makers/scorers on the opponents teams (Taylor-Wisconsin; Summers, Lucas, Lucious-MSU) pretty much avoided Nolen, making the majority of their shots against Joseph and other Gopher defenders. And don't get me started on that three-point clinic put on by the guard from Virginia.
Again, net negative: Joseph
The main problem with your theory is that Joseph would have to average 22 - 25 pts per game to make up for what he gives away on defense. I love the way you isolate Nolen's bad games to justify your unnatural dislike for Nolen's game. Let's hope that his foot heals to the point where Nolen came regain his tenacity because that is what is most lacking on this Gopher team.
Joseph's "spectacular" play last season was masked by serious supporting roles in Westbrook, Johnson, and Carter. On perimeter defense this season, Nolen pretty much stands alone without any assistance. Of course, because Joseph and Nolen are hardly ever on the floor at the same time, they may never be able to create the natural traps that is the result of getting to know your teammates' tendencies (on both offense and defense).
And Nolen needs to shoot MORE. That is the only way his shot will improve, keeping the opponents honest on defense and his teammates honest on offense. Why is Nolen the only person on the Gophers that isn't given the green light to shoot the damn ball? The stats don't back up this negative b.s. If this team wants to win, Nolen needs to shoot more without hesitation when he's open, not just because the shot clock is running out.
Again, if you want to continue to gripe, it all starts with Tubby. He looks more and more like he doesn't know what the hell he's doing with this group.