Mikie S
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Less than two weeks to midnight madness. Here’s my preseason analysis.
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CENTER: <o></o>
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Ralph Sampson III (Soph. 20.8 minutes / 6.3 points / 4.2 rebounds). Had only slightly better overall stats last year than Colt Iverson, but the edge is much bigger if you consider how ineffective he was and the minutes he got as a PF.
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Colt Iverson (Soph 17.7 min / 5.4 pts / 3.6 reb). Colt does a few things better than RSIII (i.e. blocking out) that do not show up in the stats. Here’s my observation, right or wrong: early last season Colt seemed to be on his way to the unofficial Gopher record for most floor burns in a season. But as the season progressed, I don’t remember those hustle plays so much. Perhaps, not so coincidentally, his playing minutes went down as the number of floor burns went down.
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Summary: If they progress at a normal rate, Sampson and Iverson, could both rank among the top half dozen centers in the Big-10, yet it’s possible the Gophers most effective lineup has neither on the floor. Sampson starts.
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POWER FORWARD:<o></o>
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Trevor Mbakwe (Jr. JuCo transfer). Named by several national sources as their pre-season Big-10 Newcomer-Of-The-Year. Highly athletic and aggressive inside player. Likely to see minutes a center too.
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Royce White (Fr. Consensus #31 recruit). Named by several national sources as their pre-season Big-10 Newcomer-Of-The-Year (where have I heard that before?). Very strong with a solid skill set. Could also see minutes at SF.
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Summary: Most of the guys called to play PF last year are back, but they didn’t play it well. Newcomers Mbakwe & White should make this a strength. White starts for two very different reasons: 1) Rule-of-thumb says that a top-30 freshman will usually be better than a top-5 JuCo. 2) With assault charge baggage hanging over Trevor. I believe he will be declared eligible, but may be held out of the starting lineup as a compromise measure.
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SMALL FORWARD:
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Damian Johnson (Sr, 26.7 min / 9.8 pts / 4.2 reb / 1.6 assists, Big-10 All-Defense) The embodiment of Gopher basketball last season. Great off-the-ball defender, his long arms clog up the passing lanes, but I’m somewhat ambivalent about his perimeter defense. Good garbage scorer but not much of a scoring threat from 12-feet out. Nice passer, but not a very good ball handler. Average rebounder for a SF.
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Paul Carter (Jr, 16.0 min / 5.3 pts / 4.5 reb). Easily the best rebounder from last year. Just as long and more athletic than DJ. He can get his shot just about at will … unfortunately he has problems getting that shot to drop. Showed very good, but undisciplined, potential last year.
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Devron Bostick (Sr, 11.0 min / 4.0 pts / 1.5 reb) My runner up for most disappointing Gopher last year. Had trouble adjusting to major college basketball after being the JuCo POY two years ago. I can actually see his needed scoring punch, combined with a new dedication for defense, getting him into the starting lineup, maybe even becoming the star they lacked last year … or I can see him holding down the end of the bench down.
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Rodney Williams (Fr, Consensus #46 recruit). Freakishly athletic, but really skinny with suspect skills. His upside is on a whole different level than the other SFs here, but how does his skill set match up against the, admittedly uneven, skill sets of the other Gopher SFs? We don’t know because his high school team required him to play, almost exclusively, under the basket and his highlight vids feature slam-after-slam (boring) while showing little of the skills needed to actually star in D-1 college level basketball. I can see him getting major minutes at a very deep position for the Gophers … or being a redshirt candidate.
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Summary:
Obviously DJ is the starter here. But at the same time he may be the guy with the lowest ceiling.
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SHOOTING GUARD:<o></o>
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Laurence Westbrook (Sr, 24.1 min / 12.6 pts / 2.5 reb / 1.4 ast) Hands down the toughest guy on this team. That alone will keep in the starting lineup, because he’s not the most talented (but he is the shortest). He’s a below average ball handler and passer from the SG spot, but he was the only go-to guy on last year’s team. OK from the perimeter and very good as a finisher at the hoop.
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Devoe Joseph (So, 16.7 min / 5.0 pts / 1.8 reb / 1.5 ast). Is this the year for Devoe to shine? He had some growing pains trying to learn the PG position last year, but will be playing, mostly, at his more natural SG position this year.
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Blake Hoffarber (Jr, 22.0 min / 6.4 pts / 2.7 reb / 1.3 ast). The Hoff improved his overall floor game last year, but let’s face it … his value to the Gophers is his three point shooting range and he failed at that last year. It’s really very simple; if he finds his shot he will get plenty of minutes. If not … he will be holding down the end of the bench. He could see some time in a three-guard offense.
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Summary: <o></o>
Last year, Westbrook was the only perimeter threat among the starters. He was also the only starter that could put the ball on the floor and finish constantly at the rim. But he’s just not good enough to be put in that position for a top-20 type team.
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POINT GUARD:
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Al Nolen Jr. (Jr, 26.5 min / 6.5 pts / 3.2 reb / 4.3 ast). Al was my pick for most disappointing Gopher last year. I believe his defense was way over-rated (he was absolutely abused by several Big Ten PG opponents). He couldn’t keep defenses honest with his perimeter shot. He didn’t finish at the rim. He seemingly forgot how to run the offense. He was, however, the only Gopher guard with more assists than turnovers.
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Justin Cobbs (Fr, ESPN’s #38 PG recruit). Rarely is an unheralded freshman more important to a team’s Big Ten title hopes than Cobbs. We are not talking about possible Big Ten Newcomer-of-the-Year (like either White or Mbakwe). We are talking about adequate PG play needed to compete for a conference championship. Sorry folks, but Nolen showed little sign of that when matched against quality Big Ten opponents. I’m “only” asking for a guy who will have more assists than turnovers, a guy who shots well enough to keep defenses honest, a guy who will pass the ball up court to a teammate in better position to make a play, all while playing adequate defense.
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Summary:
33.7%. Few teams can compete getting that type of shooting from their starting point guard. But neither can they expect to be very successful with a point that has more turnovers than assists, like Joseph had last season. Joseph has moved on to SG (although could still be an option if nothing else is working). Nolen will definitely get the first shot, hoping to redeem himself after last year’s performance. Cobbs is standing in the wings to take over if Nolen continues to underperform.
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CONCLUSION:<o></o>
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I believe the Gophers are still a “Star” away from being elite. Conversely, I’ve never seen a Gopher team where you can point to all 13 scholarship players and say that they could be very good potential starters.
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Early in the season we will see Tubby’s two platoon substitutions.
Starting Five: Sampson, White, Johnson, Westbrook, Nolen
Second Five: Iverson, Mbakwe, Carter, Joseph, Cobbs
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[FONT="]Most effective unit (by mid-season): [/FONT][FONT="]Mbakwe, White, Carter, Westbrook, Cobbs[/FONT]
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CENTER: <o></o>
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Ralph Sampson III (Soph. 20.8 minutes / 6.3 points / 4.2 rebounds). Had only slightly better overall stats last year than Colt Iverson, but the edge is much bigger if you consider how ineffective he was and the minutes he got as a PF.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Colt Iverson (Soph 17.7 min / 5.4 pts / 3.6 reb). Colt does a few things better than RSIII (i.e. blocking out) that do not show up in the stats. Here’s my observation, right or wrong: early last season Colt seemed to be on his way to the unofficial Gopher record for most floor burns in a season. But as the season progressed, I don’t remember those hustle plays so much. Perhaps, not so coincidentally, his playing minutes went down as the number of floor burns went down.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Summary: If they progress at a normal rate, Sampson and Iverson, could both rank among the top half dozen centers in the Big-10, yet it’s possible the Gophers most effective lineup has neither on the floor. Sampson starts.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <o></o>
POWER FORWARD:<o></o>
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Trevor Mbakwe (Jr. JuCo transfer). Named by several national sources as their pre-season Big-10 Newcomer-Of-The-Year. Highly athletic and aggressive inside player. Likely to see minutes a center too.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Royce White (Fr. Consensus #31 recruit). Named by several national sources as their pre-season Big-10 Newcomer-Of-The-Year (where have I heard that before?). Very strong with a solid skill set. Could also see minutes at SF.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Summary: Most of the guys called to play PF last year are back, but they didn’t play it well. Newcomers Mbakwe & White should make this a strength. White starts for two very different reasons: 1) Rule-of-thumb says that a top-30 freshman will usually be better than a top-5 JuCo. 2) With assault charge baggage hanging over Trevor. I believe he will be declared eligible, but may be held out of the starting lineup as a compromise measure.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
SMALL FORWARD:
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Damian Johnson (Sr, 26.7 min / 9.8 pts / 4.2 reb / 1.6 assists, Big-10 All-Defense) The embodiment of Gopher basketball last season. Great off-the-ball defender, his long arms clog up the passing lanes, but I’m somewhat ambivalent about his perimeter defense. Good garbage scorer but not much of a scoring threat from 12-feet out. Nice passer, but not a very good ball handler. Average rebounder for a SF.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Paul Carter (Jr, 16.0 min / 5.3 pts / 4.5 reb). Easily the best rebounder from last year. Just as long and more athletic than DJ. He can get his shot just about at will … unfortunately he has problems getting that shot to drop. Showed very good, but undisciplined, potential last year.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Devron Bostick (Sr, 11.0 min / 4.0 pts / 1.5 reb) My runner up for most disappointing Gopher last year. Had trouble adjusting to major college basketball after being the JuCo POY two years ago. I can actually see his needed scoring punch, combined with a new dedication for defense, getting him into the starting lineup, maybe even becoming the star they lacked last year … or I can see him holding down the end of the bench down.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Rodney Williams (Fr, Consensus #46 recruit). Freakishly athletic, but really skinny with suspect skills. His upside is on a whole different level than the other SFs here, but how does his skill set match up against the, admittedly uneven, skill sets of the other Gopher SFs? We don’t know because his high school team required him to play, almost exclusively, under the basket and his highlight vids feature slam-after-slam (boring) while showing little of the skills needed to actually star in D-1 college level basketball. I can see him getting major minutes at a very deep position for the Gophers … or being a redshirt candidate.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Summary:
Obviously DJ is the starter here. But at the same time he may be the guy with the lowest ceiling.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
SHOOTING GUARD:<o></o>
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Laurence Westbrook (Sr, 24.1 min / 12.6 pts / 2.5 reb / 1.4 ast) Hands down the toughest guy on this team. That alone will keep in the starting lineup, because he’s not the most talented (but he is the shortest). He’s a below average ball handler and passer from the SG spot, but he was the only go-to guy on last year’s team. OK from the perimeter and very good as a finisher at the hoop.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Devoe Joseph (So, 16.7 min / 5.0 pts / 1.8 reb / 1.5 ast). Is this the year for Devoe to shine? He had some growing pains trying to learn the PG position last year, but will be playing, mostly, at his more natural SG position this year.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Blake Hoffarber (Jr, 22.0 min / 6.4 pts / 2.7 reb / 1.3 ast). The Hoff improved his overall floor game last year, but let’s face it … his value to the Gophers is his three point shooting range and he failed at that last year. It’s really very simple; if he finds his shot he will get plenty of minutes. If not … he will be holding down the end of the bench. He could see some time in a three-guard offense.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Summary: <o></o>
Last year, Westbrook was the only perimeter threat among the starters. He was also the only starter that could put the ball on the floor and finish constantly at the rim. But he’s just not good enough to be put in that position for a top-20 type team.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
POINT GUARD:
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Al Nolen Jr. (Jr, 26.5 min / 6.5 pts / 3.2 reb / 4.3 ast). Al was my pick for most disappointing Gopher last year. I believe his defense was way over-rated (he was absolutely abused by several Big Ten PG opponents). He couldn’t keep defenses honest with his perimeter shot. He didn’t finish at the rim. He seemingly forgot how to run the offense. He was, however, the only Gopher guard with more assists than turnovers.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Justin Cobbs (Fr, ESPN’s #38 PG recruit). Rarely is an unheralded freshman more important to a team’s Big Ten title hopes than Cobbs. We are not talking about possible Big Ten Newcomer-of-the-Year (like either White or Mbakwe). We are talking about adequate PG play needed to compete for a conference championship. Sorry folks, but Nolen showed little sign of that when matched against quality Big Ten opponents. I’m “only” asking for a guy who will have more assists than turnovers, a guy who shots well enough to keep defenses honest, a guy who will pass the ball up court to a teammate in better position to make a play, all while playing adequate defense.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Summary:
33.7%. Few teams can compete getting that type of shooting from their starting point guard. But neither can they expect to be very successful with a point that has more turnovers than assists, like Joseph had last season. Joseph has moved on to SG (although could still be an option if nothing else is working). Nolen will definitely get the first shot, hoping to redeem himself after last year’s performance. Cobbs is standing in the wings to take over if Nolen continues to underperform.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
CONCLUSION:<o></o>
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
I believe the Gophers are still a “Star” away from being elite. Conversely, I’ve never seen a Gopher team where you can point to all 13 scholarship players and say that they could be very good potential starters.
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
Early in the season we will see Tubby’s two platoon substitutions.
Starting Five: Sampson, White, Johnson, Westbrook, Nolen
Second Five: Iverson, Mbakwe, Carter, Joseph, Cobbs
<!--[if !supportEmptyParas]--> <!--[endif]--><o></o>
[FONT="]Most effective unit (by mid-season): [/FONT][FONT="]Mbakwe, White, Carter, Westbrook, Cobbs[/FONT]