bear2be2 said:
Crawfoso1973 said:
Chuckroast said:
bear2be2 said:
Crawfoso1973 said:
There is a lot more to playing PG then dribbling the ball up the floor. Our staff is not dumb, I have no inside info but I can guarantee you we will not be going into the season with a PG-by-committee led by Flagler. This would be inviting disaster. It was painfully obvious Flagler is not a PG and every second you force him to play a PG role takes away from what he does best. Cryer is even worse when forced to play PG and he is still recovering from injury. We all saw how much our offense bogged down last year the games where Akinjo was out or playing injured. Love and Keyonte are both combo guards and can play PG in a pinch, but neither will be the primary PG for us. We don't need a superstar PG or another volume scorer, just a low-usage guy who can initiate offense, hit open shots, distribute, and defend the perimeter.
You have to adapt to the talent you have. Hunter leaving opens up another spot for a guard and I'll bet we use it. But you're not going to have enough minutes for six guards to get quality playing time. And we've got four high-level shooting guards that are all going to want to play. If you add another point guard, that's going to cut into somebody's time -- and it's likely the player losing time is better on the whole than whoever we bring in.
You also have the issue of roster composition, and every additional guard we bring in closes a scholarship to needed help in the frontcourt.
This isn't as simple as just saying, "Go get a point guard." If the right fit is out there, you pounce. If it's not, we've got guys on this team who can get the ball up the court and get us into our offense. We don't need and won't want a ball-dominant point guard next year with the talent we've got on the wings. I'd just as soon let Bonner be a purely distributing point guard and go with a five-guard rotation next year than go add someone who is going take minutes and shots from Flagler, Cryer, George and Love.
Agree. We have bigger needs elsewhere.
I would say our PG need is a 9 on a scale of 1-10. Looking at our guard group they are almost all scoring guards. Keyonte will end up our highest useage player by a longshot, and will have the ball in his hands a huge % of the time when on the floor, but we need someone else to take the pressure off of him. Love is a combo guard and is coming off a serious knee injury so he might need to be eased back in. Cryer (who may or may not be healthy) and Flagler have proven they need to play exclusively off the ball. Bonner is still a developmental guy who at this point is just a hustle player and in a perfect world would take a redshirt year. College hoops is a guard-oriented game, and we need a starting PG who can complement Keyonte. Someone who can take on defensive pressure and get our offense in gear. A low-useage, efficient player who can defend, distribute, and hit open shots. I am confident our staff may already have someone in place ready to fill this role.
I think your opinion on Flagler as a ball-handler is outdated. He struggled mightily early in his transition to point guard, but by the end of the season, he was much, much better in that role. In his two best games of the year -- at Oklahoma State and against UNC in the tournament -- he played most of the second half on the ball and was nothing short of dominant. He's certainly capable of handling that role for half a game. Committee the point the other 20 minutes and you're fine.
If we can find the type of point guard you describe here, great. Go get him. But the situation isn't as dire as you suggest. Once we get into the halfcourt, Keyonte George is going to be doing the bulk of the creating anyway.
We can agree to disagree on Flagler. Flagler can handle the ball adequately but he is not a PG and that was painfully obvious all season. Try as you may, you can't force a square peg into a round hole. Flagler lacks PG vision and instincts, and while I agree he improved as a decent secondary ballhandler, there is much more nuance to playing the PG position than being able to dribble the ball up the court. Even the 2 games you mention, he was terrific scoring but was not a distributor: @ OSU 2 assists in 41 minutes; UNC 2 assists in 41 minutes. Flagler is an efficient assassin playing off the ball and thrives with guys who can create and hit him in his spots. But every possession you force him to initiate offense as the primary PG on the floor and play with the ball in his hands is a possession you take him away from what he does best.
And Cryer is essentially Flagler 2.0 but coming off very serious injuries to both feet. We don't know if Cryer will ever be the same guy again, and even if he returns healthy he might be on a minutes restriction and eased back into the rotation.
Love is a capable secondary ballhandler and creator, but he too is coming off of serious injury and may not be ready for heavy minutes right out of the gate.
I agree Keyonte will dominate the ball in half-court possessions, but I've always felt our offense looks better with at least 2 PGs / combo guards playing on the floor at the same time. Butler / Teague / Davion thrived playing together because defenses couldn't focus on stopping just one of them, allowing us to exploit perimeter mismatches. Butler and Davion in particular could score from the perimeter, penetrate, and create for others. We need another guy who at minimum can run the offense when Keyonte is out of the game, and we need someone who can take the ballhandling and playmaking pressure off of him so he can score more efficiently and take on less defensive pressure.