Adriacus Peratuun said:
bear2be2 said:
Adriacus Peratuun said:
bear2be2 said:
Adriacus Peratuun said:
With a 13 person roster, the likelihood that any roster would not be a combination [of development and one & done players] is WAY beyond minimal. The worry about 1 & dones seems ridiculous. Even if a Team takes 3 in any recruiting class, that leaves 10 other players. If you assume that 7 of the 13 total players are underclassmen, that leaves 6 upperclassmen. The premise of lacking development, experience, and continuity is grasping at straws.
The items are simply not incompatible.
You're talking about three in one class. If you take two or three in every class, you're turning over your roster every year or two the way Kentucky and Duke have. This is the pattern I'm hoping to avoid.
The transfer portal makes it much easier to do this because you can fill holes immediately with experienced talent. And I suspect Drew, who has navigated the transfer process masterfully for years, will continue to do so.
But we've never in our program's history recruited at the level we are now. I just don't want to see our formula change because we have access to more and better high school talent.
What?
If they are One & Done Players, they will never overlap. Your premise ignores the very definition.
Taking three One & Done players each season necessarily means that a team never has more than 3 on the team at any given time. That is the exact definition of One & Done. Thus, the team would always have ten other roster spots.
My premise is that you want/need some really good three- and four-year players to be the leaders in your program. If you're losing two or three freshmen in every class, you're going to have trouble developing any of those kinds of players because no one's staying around long enough to develop. This is what happened at Kentucky for years. They had a new nucleus year after year after year and it was always made up primarily of freshmen.
The transfer portal has changed this equation quite a bit, as vanillabryce pointed out above. And it's probably made my concerns moot. You now can recruit those established, experienced players to make up for gaps in development, which is IMO a good thing.
I just don't want us to abandon the get old, stay old strategy that has taken us from a good program to a great one, now that we have access to a higher caliber of high school player. That's an easy trap to fall into, and I'd like to see us avoid it.
Moving the goalpost. You expressly stated the roster turning over every 1-2 years. Read your own words:
Further, recruiting elite "one & done" talent and developing other talent for an experienced roster are NOT at odds.
As to your "don't change our strategy" comment, any program that isn't constantly evolving in response to a rapidly changing recruiting environment will necessarily get left in the dust. OTT, NIL, O&D, whatever…….adapt or die. You are basically arguing that cable works well and we should ignore streaming, or that 8 tracks are solid no need for cassette tapes, or flip phones are awesome who needs that new iPhone.
FYI…….Kentucky loses because Calipari is stuck on his antiquated Dribble Drive offense and his teams lack the O efficiency to win the Tourney. Duke has faced a myriad of small problems that hinder their teams. Age is a Talking Head simplistic explanation. Age didn't prevent Cade Cunningham from elevating his team several levels. Age didn't prevent Jeremy Sochan from producing in a way that allowed Baylor to win a B12 regular season title. Age is a cop out argument.
Whatever. You're just looking for an argument at this point. Anyone who reads my posts in this thread with the intent to understand rather than rebutt will see pretty quickly what my point is and why I feel the way I do. You all are free to disagree but the constant gotcha bull**** is exhausting.
And Scott Drew's recruiting doesn't need to evolve because his strategy was way ahead of the curve. He's been doing what others are currently doing through the transfer portal for a decade now. It's a proven way to keep established, mature, experienced talent in your program and supplement those developed within the program. There's no reason to deviate from what he's been doing, which is to bring in talented freshman around an experience core. And all I've done in this thread (much to the inexplicable consternation of some) is express a desire that we keep the same balance and hierarchy in our program that has brought us unprecedented success.
And we'll just have to agree to disagree on Kentucky. It's not age that's the issue. That's a gross oversimplification of my point. Age, in and of itself, is neither a benefit nor a hinderance. I'm talking about maturity and continuity. When your roster never has enough of those two things, it's hard to line up all the ducks necessary to accomplish something as difficult as winning an NCAA men's basketball title.
You're making this an argument about individuals, which it is not. It's an argument about roster composition. I'm all for adding talented freshmen. I just don't ever want to be in a situation where I'm forced to rely on them to carry my team. There aren't many freshmen out there who are ready for that type of role or responsibility.