For what it's worth, I would choose Fizer too (at this point anyway). I just think they're very different type players. It's kind of like comparing Kevin Durant to Karl Malone.
Thank you.
Good analogy and probably correct.
For what it's worth, I would choose Fizer too (at this point anyway). I just think they're very different type players. It's kind of like comparing Kevin Durant to Karl Malone.
You know the only thing I think Craig really does better than Fizer is that fade away jumper. He's really good at that.
Fizer on the other hand was a great defender, great rebounder, could dunk over anyone, could shoot the 3, and had huge hands which could catch about any inside pass which was thrown his way from a slashing Tinslely or Nurse, could dribble the ball all the way down the court, could hit all the big free throws. He just had all the intangibles that Junior year he was at ISU.
I'd take Fizer in his prime over Craig Brackins any day.
Seriously, at this point in their respective Cyclone careers, which one would you take? Most importantly...WHY?
I have been thinking about this since the day after last year's Colorado game, at CU (possibly the worst game in ISU MBB history), when I was trying to talk myself off a cliff. When was that...last January?
Brackins is much more the complete player. Without Jamaal Tinsley, Marcus Fizer couldn't break an egg.
Let Brackins hit a basket in Lawrence Fieldhouse to beat the Jayhawks and we can have this discussion.Fizer was a man amongst boys. He had the attitude and strength to score on or over anybody. ISU had not had another player with his attitude.
Craig is a great kid and put up 42 on KU, which was great -- but then gets shut down by Iowa (Iowa!). To me he's just not consistently aggressive like Fizer was, but he's been more of a perimeter player, so it's not really a fair comparison.
He also hasn't had another go-to guy in the lineup until this year, so let's wait and see how things play out in the Big 12.
Fizer was a consistent hammer his junior year, the physical style of play we had then was perfect for him and no one in the league could stop it. He really was a man among boys that year, so right now I'd have to pick Fizer -- but Brackins might be better suited for the NBA if he gets with the right team.
Fizer his Jr. year vs. Brackins now, Fizer, hands down. I do think that Brackins has more potential though. Fizer dominated the college game because he was built like Karl Malone, a man amongst boys at that level. Plus he was an excellent jump shooter.
However, am I the only one that remembers times where Fizer would prefer to face the basket from about 12 feet, take the jumper or ball fake and get to the rim? He really preferred not to play with his back to the basket. He could do what he wanted in college, but I think his less developed post game hurt him in the NBA. This is where I see Brackins having a bit more all-around potential. He'll have to get a lot tougher to stick in the NBA, but he uses both hands well, sees the court and passes exceptionally well, which are keys to NBA post players.
Just my opinion though, not meant to knock Fizer, I'd take him over Brackins right now. I guess his shooting ability made it so he didn't have to post guys up as much.
Clonin, your picture of Fizer is fantasy. Fizer could do nothing at all in college until Jamaal Tinsley showed up to create oportunities for him and get him the ball. Before JT, defenders would pack it in and Fizer could not even smell the ball. With JT in Ames, Fizer flourished as JT would get in the lane, draw everyone to him, then dish the ball. After ISU in Chicago, Fizer was back to trying to get his own shot, and he failed miserably. Brackins scored 42 points on a very good KU team with no help from anyone. And he was a sophomore. Fizer's big year, he was a junior.
Really?
Fizer averaged 14 and 7 as a freshman, 18 and 7 as a sophomore before Tinsley ever showed up. You don't have to lie to make your point.