Where you and I most differ in our view of our program is that you think Houston intentionally builds around less talented players, whereas I think they simply haven't been able to recruit at the level they would ideally prefer, mostly because they were affiliated with a non-P6 conference until this past year.bear2be2 said:A lot of freshmen don't look ready to compete at a championship level as freshmen. That was true of all five of Houston's starters last year. If you're constantly recruiting over homegrown players, you'll never find out how good any of them are.Crawfoso1973 said:
Another way to look at it though is that players have to earn their time on the court. Every recruit is not entitled to playing time if they fail to develop. We've had guys like Loveday and Jordan Turner occupying roster spots for years without ever becoming viable rotation players. The transfer portal affords guys like that the opportunity to earn playing time if they know they weren't going to get meaningful minutes for us. Little himself probably understood he wouldn't get meaningful minutes for us until 2 or 3 years down the road. He probably wasn't willing to wait around for that when he could transfer somewhere else and get immediate playing time.
If you had watched Shead, Sharp, Roberts or Francis as freshmen, you would have likely come to the same conclusion you've reached on Little. But where we hit the portal or bring in a five-star freshman to upgrade every potential weakness, Houston relies on its player development and entrusts ever-increasing roles to the guys its recruited into its program.
Objectively speaking, I'd have to say Houston's strategy is working better. They've been one of the most consistently successful tournament teams in the country the past six years, while we've been among the nation's biggest tournament underachievers since our title run.
It's easy to say "yeah, we don't build around 5* players" when you can't get those guys to come play for you, anyway. I guess the litmus test will be watching what Houston does now that the concern about their conference competition has been removed.
Has UH been more consistent in their tourney performances? Undoubtedly. But their style of roster-building has a pretty clear ceiling. That ceiling is "good enough to make a deep run if things go right." It's a viable strategy, but it's never going to make you the odds-on favorite to win the whole tourney. A healthy 2024 UH is probably no better than their 2021 team, which to be certain, was very good.
I happen to prefer our focus on team-building. While not as consistent, the ceiling is "beat the living **** out of every team in front of you." We saw it in 2021, and we saw it this year with UConn, whose 2024 roster was constructed similarly to what Coach Drew and staff have been aiming for with the last few Baylor squads.