What is the definition of a Big Ten caliber guard? There seems to be no established one but for many people around here it seems to be one that had a high star rating coming out of high school, got numerous P6 offers, and was on a P6 roster. I'm going to give my definition of a Big Ten caliber guard which I believe is a much better one:
A Big Ten caliber guard is one who comes to this league and plays well, or at least well enough.
There are countless four star players with multiple P6 offers who had really mediocre careers. For example, we just unloaded one when Tre' Williams transferred. He fell out the rotation for a 3-28 Oregon State team about 60% through the season and was hardly heard from again. I bet his coach wishes he recruited a mid-major player who had proven himself over an extended period of time instead.
Willis didn't look like a starting point guard for a high level team earlier in his career (didn't look like one during his first stint here either although he played all right then) but he performed well above average for the league during his 5th year of playing.
I really don't care where a player comes from but I was curious about Larson so I looked in to his historical record and watched a 10 minute video of Wofford playing Georgia this season. I think he would do just fine here as a 5th year player. He's not flashy or super fast but he plays hard on both ends of the court, shoots well, keeps the ball moving, shows leadership, and appears physically strong. I don't claim to know Ben Johnson's philosophy for team play clearly yet but my initial impressions are that an experienced, low-usage point guard who shoots well, plays hard, and shows leadership would fit in well with Johnson's preferences.