The two parts of an identity that this team has developed is great ball movement on offense and great team rebounding. If someone wants to earn minutes, they have to not detract from those two things.
Right, and a big part of that was because we lost our most efficient (and effective) guard. It’s not as though Wigginton’s efficiency went down when Babb went out.The team was better because it had both Babb and Wigginton as opposed to just Wigginton.
If he’s improved, perhaps. But not the Wigginton we saw a year ago that struggled with basic post feeds.He will play 30 minutes or more a game and that shouldn't even be a question.
The Iowa State team in Maui doesn't lose the first game with a healthy Wigginton.
His advanced stats were not significantly different pre/post Babb injury. The team was better because Babb was more effective and efficient, not because Wigginton was different.
When were you convinced in the previous 6 recent tournaments?I really hope I'm wrong, but I'm not convinced yet this is a Tourney team, despite all of the individual talent assembled.
When were you convinced in the previous 6 recent tournaments?
I can appreciate the emotional hedge of not buying in until proven otherwise, but 6 games in all metrics suggest nothing but good team ball. We haven’t been winning via individual talent.
Where do you see this team following short?
The Big 12 may be even better than last year so it’s going to be a bloodbath, but if we don’t make the tournament it’ll be a huge fail by the staff.
Well, our Adjusted Offense is 18th but our Adjusted Tempo is 217, so we’re scoring well despite not exactly running a lot. For reference, last year we finished 130 in Adjusted Tempo. If we become more of a half court team in conference play, we’ll also have more options.Well, with Niang's junior and senior teams, I came into the year feeling very certain they were Tourney teams because we had already seen the core of those teams play and produce at a high level. Same with Prohm's second year once Morris decided he would return. There probably is some emotional hedge and psychology involved in my opinion like you allude to, but I think I'm being objective.
I haven't seen ISU play against a team that is really disciplined and will slow it down. We seem to score best on the fast-break when we're out in transition. Good defensive stops and rebounding leads to that. I'm not convinced our half-court offense will be that solid when more disciplined teams force us to play that way.
To answer your question: I don't know where we'll fall short if it happens and I if I had to bet, I'd bet on ISU making the Tournament right now since we have the talent assembled to be a Tourney team.
You’re probably right, but I’m holding out hope Talley as a pseudo point-forward four can match THT’s current 32% on 3P shooting, sophomore Georges 33% (30% in conference play), or even Clyburn’s 31%. If he can do that, he can play alongside Lard or Young and we’ve got another mismatch on offense that can defend all over the court.
Our rosterbation is Prohm’s burden
The two parts of an identity that this team has developed is great ball movement on offense and great team rebounding. If someone wants to earn minutes, they have to not detract from those two things.
Completely agree with your point, and I thought Talley showed good discipline and selection when he got more usage (and back in the grove after his injury).The key there for Talley is he doesn’t need to shoot it 6 times a game. 1-3 would be enough to make them have to cover him. Just shoot them when you’re wide open, no need at all to shoot contested threes.
He doesn’t need to improve significantly to not get his minutes reduced. I don’t know what you are smoking but it’s must be good. You think a potential late first round pick is going to be fighting for minutes?If he’s improved, perhaps. But not the Wigginton we saw a year ago that struggled with basic post feeds.
Of course we have a better chance against Arizona with Wigginton, that’s not anywhere close to being mutually exclusive with saying his minutes will go down from last year unless he’s improved. We had a better chance with Lard or Talley or Young, too, but unless those guys have improved significantly, they also aren’t playing as many minutes this year.
No one has said “fighting for minutes”, but if you view that analogous to Wigginton averaging less than his 33 minutes/game from last year, sure.He doesn’t need to improve significantly to not get his minutes reduced. I don’t know what you are smoking but it’s must be good. You think a potential late first round pick is going to be fighting for minutes?
During conference play, this is what I see happening.
Heavy rotation:
LW
NWB
Shayok
THT
Lard
Jacobsen
Halliburton
Will play every game, but spot minutes:
Solo
Talley
Everyone else only plays in blowouts and WV foul fests.
Also really effective switching on defense, and solid help defense without overcommitting.
This is my view as well, provides positional balance between guards, wings, and big men, and is consistent with the various efficiency metrics that each player has demonstrated either this season or where they left things at the end of last season.
I love Solo, but Lard and Jacobson are simply better right now, and I think we are better playing four of our (very good to excellent) guards or wings. Talley can guard 1-4... but so can Nick, Shayok, THT, and Haliburton, and all of them are more of a threat to score.
We already have that switchtastic defense before Talley.
To be fair, we're judging Solomon based on last season. I'm sure he's worked to improve as well. The tough part for him will be getting back into the flow of things, so that's where I agree with the spot minute thing.