I think my issue, and we're seeing it in this tournament especially, is that you don't need elite natural ability/measurables to be an elite college player.Crawfoso1973 said:
It doesn't always have to be an either / or. The very best combine mamba mindset, hunger and mental toughness with natural abilities.
In the NBA, where everyone is an elite athlete, you need to be an elite athlete/physical specimen with an elite game to survive/thrive.
In college basketball, you can reach the highest level being an extremely smart/skilled/crafty player with mediocre athletic talent by NBA standards. Drew Timme and Markquis Nowell are perfect examples, but there have been many over the years. We've had a lot of them in our own program.
I would honestly prefer to focus on those hungry, chip-on-the-shoulder guys who are undersized or not quite gifted enough for the NBA level because a) they're really damn good college players and b) most aren't a threat to leave early, so you actually get a chance to build something with them.
If the one year we were getting with guys like Keyonte George was his junior year, I would feel differently. But these elite freshman recruits are very rarely polished enough at that stage to make the same kind of difference an experienced/accomplished junior or senior would in the same role.