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Fullbacksympathy

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Everything posted by Fullbacksympathy

  1. Great pickup. D1 ready muscle and great athleticism. Don’t know if his three point threat is legit but if he’s serviceable on that end he could really help us. Defensively there’s no reason he can’t be elite.
  2. Really hoping we land him. He's an absolute terror. He looks like a 25 year old playing with high school kids in AAU rn.
  3. Lloyd will play wherever we need him. I'd take him at his word that he's a combo guard and our guards will pretty much be positionless. Also, his pops moved to Lincoln from Cali so I think the fam is pretty sold on where Fred's program is headed. High bball IQ dad and son. Really excited for Jr. to get on the court. So is he.
  4. As a coach’s kid who has a coach’s kid, I can promise there is a heck of a lot less freedom in most instances. Sam is an extremely good team defender. He can get beat off the dribble once in awhile, but he sees the entire court precisely because he’s a coach’s kid. He’s also 6’ and dunks two handed, so it isn’t like he’s some throwback. He has D1 athleticism and strength to boot. He’s just short.
  5. Agree. And he’s a weight room kid. He’s physically stronger than almost anyone he’s guarding.
  6. I just remember my dad loving Strick so much when he came in as a freshman. I truly modeled how I thought about defense watching him on the perimeter. “See 21? THAT’s how you sit down on defense.” He or Pike are the easy picks, but I’m gonna throw an often forgotten one out: Ade. Not sure I’ve seen a harder worker ever put the uni on.
  7. Had em both on my summer league team and they both had a lot of love for Doc. Sek was an elite defender and is still meandering around pro leagues and Ryan led the B12 in 3pt % his senior year and greatly improved his athleticism/ball skills over four years. Both guys were able to scrape together a living hooping for a pretty long time after graduating. Says a lot about the toughness Doc instilled and their willingness to endure it.
  8. His defense and 3pt shooting will get him to the league as a reserve for sure. He has elite athleticism. Will he be an all star? All time great? No. But picture a more athletic Pat Bev who can shoot. That’s gonna be him.
  9. Hoping they land him or someone similar yep.
  10. We could still use a true stretch 4 who can rebound. We still haven’t been able to put out a lineup where all 5 guys can shoot it from three while maintaining traditional defensive positions under Hoiberg. Mast and a true stretch 4 (6’8” 230 or so would be great). Sounds like we’re working on one.
  11. Brice intrigues me at 6’7”, 40% from 3, 85% from the line, 14 ppg last season. Not to put that much on the kid but he kind of screams the same long scoring wing (TP, JPJ) that we’ve had previously. That tourney team had some serious defense though. I think we’ll have better shooting but TP, SS, Gallegos (elite perimeter defender), Webster, Rivers, Benny Parker, Smith could all really get after it defensively. And Pitchford was a matchup nightmare when he was dialed in. Very excited to see how this upcoming roster shakes out though, I agree. It’s as complete as any I can remember this millennium.
  12. I would normally agree but there might be something coming down the pike given how things are currently going this offseason with regard to recruiting. No inside knowledge. Love WB.
  13. I thought I was watching Janowski highlights! Those two could be a whole lot of fun.
  14. I’m guessing Allick will spend a healthy amount of time at the 4 and 5 next season and get his minutes that way. He and Gary on the court at the same time would give us some crazy athleticism. I could see Mast/Gary/Allick all getting about the same minutes if Allick is running back and forth wherever we need him. Gary has a knack for very clutch hustle plays and won us a couple of games with them last season. Regardless, Allick and Mast are seriously great additions.
  15. This roster now has basically no weaknesses and certainly seems like they will play on the bubble next season. Amazing work from the staff.
  16. Yep. Better late than never. Huge get.
  17. Sorry. I was talking more in terms of his speed/athleticism. I don’t think he’s an elite offensive talent.
  18. I love this get. Kid is elite in transition and can really play defense. Easily a good enough ball handler to run point and already has a lot of B1G experience at a program traditionally better than ours.
  19. Think Juwan Gary at guard. Extremely fast, elite defender, unpolished but pretty effective at times offensively. Serviceable shooter. Impacts the game in many ways. For our newly found identity, great fit if we can get him. Definitely could play PG.
  20. All true, but again with the smaller populations there is basically no AAU. Supreme is trying to get it going in Kearney though.
  21. Fair, sorta, but the AAU coaches who get hired to coach high school have already demonstrated success at the AAU level. The AAU coaches that coach in HS dress up like anyone else does for HS games. Summer ball is what it is. My personal opinion is that every HS coach, whether or not currently employed, should be required to have a teaching certificate to be in that sort of an intense environment with public school students. I think it would weed out a lot of bad apples who make it into the HS ranks. Why would an AAU program start up anywhere in Nebraska outside of Lincoln or Omaha? That would make no sense. There is no population to support it. It isn't even a relevant issue in smaller communities where they have one, maybe two teams per grade and no one ever gets cut. My experience as a player and coach in a larger population is that relationships are established on club teams well before kids even know who coaches high school are or where they will attend.
  22. I mean, I generally agree, but didn't you just complain about AAU creating inequity in your own situation? How do you reconcile those two things? It sounds like the kid you mentioned who skipped the game had more of an ethics problem than an AAU one. I personally believe club sports should be a younger kid thing and summer/offseason thing for HS kids, but I'm not the only person allowed to determine what has equitable value. Some people value club sports more. It is what it is. That said, the pageantry of HS crowds and student culture, to me, will always make HS way better than AAU anything, and I think it will always lure great athletes.
  23. I think this is sound advice for small schools, but there are some rarely discussed privileges that come from playing lower competition in terms of opportunities. Not very many kids can play two or three sports in Class A because they aren't good enough (I think it's only like 30% at that level). The higher up you go in class competition, the lower percentage of kids playing multiple sports, and not all kids even like three sports. If a kid is talented enough to letter in more than one sport, they definitely should do it though, I agree. And, yes, college coaches look for multi-sport athletes because they are obviously the best athletes. Most kids don't have that gift. Most kids' ceiling in bigger districts is high school athletics and, in most instances, they have to work extremely hard to make one high school team before their athletic career ends at 18 (at the oldest). I'd rather a kid have to push through emotional burnout than never be able to experience high school athletics at all. I'm not sure what the solution is in bigger populations. I also think emotional burnout happens to kids who are constantly playing a sport and have no true offseason. I loathed going straight into basketball from football after the basketball season had already started in high school. It was multiple sports that personally burned me out and made me skip a spring sport to recharge. I see it now with kids I coach who begin baseball training in the middle of basketball season. For younger kids, it's important to expose them to multiple sports and let them decide, but I'm a pretty big proponent of keeping them physically active year round whether they like multiple sports or not given childhood obesity has tripled in the past 30 years. Basketball, specifically, should focus on individual skills in the summer and less games. Unfortunately, that trend is the polar opposite in many programs. I think kids should play 15-20 basketball games max in the summer (April-July), but a lot of them are playing 40-50 which is awful.
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