Not sure about you guys, but I'd much rather have a deep NCAA run and zero lottery picks than lose in the first round with 2. Not to knock Drummond, but his contribution to UConn basketball is not particularly significant. Lamb, too was more the 2nd wheel than a go to guy. When I think of past UConn lottery picks, they don't even move the needle as far as their contribution to the program's history goes.
Lamb was the second wheel on a national championship team. I loved his game. I agree, I would have liked to have seen longer Husky tenures from the both of them.Not sure about you guys, but I'd much rather have a deep NCAA run and zero lottery picks than lose in the first round with 2. Not to knock Drummond, but his contribution to UConn basketball is not particularly significant. Lamb, too was more the 2nd wheel than a go to guy. When I think of past UConn lottery picks, they don't even move the needle as far as their contribution to the program's history goes.
Not sure about you guys, but I'd much rather have a deep NCAA run and zero lottery picks than lose in the first round with 2. Not to knock Drummond, but his contribution to UConn basketball is not particularly significant. Lamb, too was more the 2nd wheel than a go to guy. When I think of past UConn lottery picks, they don't even move the needle as far as their contribution to the program's history goes.
Not sure about you guys, but I'd much rather have a deep NCAA run and zero lottery picks than lose in the first round with 2. Not to knock Drummond, but his contribution to UConn basketball is not particularly significant. Lamb, too was more the 2nd wheel than a go to guy. When I think of past UConn lottery picks, they don't even move the needle as far as their contribution to the program's history goes.
Not sure about you guys, but I'd much rather have a deep NCAA run and zero lottery picks than lose in the first round with 2. Not to knock Drummond, but his contribution to UConn basketball is not particularly significant. Lamb, too was more the 2nd wheel than a go to guy. When I think of past UConn lottery picks, they don't even move the needle as far as their contribution to the program's history goes.
Anyone who believes that this long run of excellence is possible without lottery picks is kidding themselves.
Ask JC how important the NBA draft is to recruiting.
Pretending he was somehow more important than Kemba and even Orkiaki in that run is an interesting view. But OK...my view is that his accomplishment while at UConn are on the lower end for our lottery picks. He made some shots, but let's be real. That team began and ended with one guy and it wasn't Jeremy Lamb. Everyone else was backgound music. When it ame time to step into the role as the man, he was nothing more than average, with a tendncy to disapear in some critical moments.During the 11 game BE/NCAA run it seemed like Lamb hit a clutch floater, or steal for a coast to coast dunk in every game. Without Lamb we aren't winning a 3rd National Championship. The dude earned a lifetime pass for his 2011 contributions in my book
That is really the point. Not saying he was a bad player, just that his accomplishments were modest compared to most UONN lottery picks.To play devil's advocate: you could make the point that as far as what Lamb accomplished in his second year, when he was supposed to be a go-to-guy and a leader, was far short of what our past lottery picks have accomplished as the #1 option.
Guys like Ray, Rip, Caron, Emeka, and Kemba accomplished much more under the burden of leading their teams than Lamb did.
To play devil's advocate: you could make the point that as far as what Lamb accomplished in his second year, when he was supposed to be a go-to-guy and a leader, was far short of what our past lottery picks have accomplished as the #1 option.
Guys like Ray, Rip, Caron, Emeka, and Kemba accomplished much more under the burden of leading their teams than Lamb did.
Pretending he was somehow more important than Kemba and even Orkiaki in that run is an interesting view. But OK...my view is that his accomplishment while at UConn are on the lower end for our lottery picks. He made some shots, but let's be real. That team began and ended with one guy and it wasn't Jeremy Lamb. Everyone else was backgound music. When it ame time to step into the role as the man, he was nothing more than average, with a tendncy to disapear in some critical moments.
Pretending he was somehow more important than Kemba and even Orkiaki in that run is an interesting view. But OK...my view is that his accomplishment while at UConn are on the lower end for our lottery picks. He made some shots, but let's be real. That team began and ended with one guy and it wasn't Jeremy Lamb. Everyone else was backgound music. When it ame time to step into the role as the man, he was nothing more than average, with a tendncy to disapear in some critical moments.
Not sure about you guys, but I'd much rather have a deep NCAA run and zero lottery picks than lose in the first round with 2. Not to knock Drummond, but his contribution to UConn basketball is not particularly significant. Lamb, too was more the 2nd wheel than a go to guy. When I think of past UConn lottery picks, they don't even move the needle as far as their contribution to the program's history goes.
Anyone who believes that this long run of excellence is possible without lottery picks is kidding themselves.
Ask JC how important the NBA draft is to recruiting.
Of course it does, but on the other hand we had some terrific teams BEFORE we had lots of NBA draft picks, and the team with the most NBA picks flamed out, this one with 2 lottery pciks did too, so maybe it helps less than you think.Yes - this. It helps.....a lot.
Of course it does, but on the other hand we had some terrific teams BEFORE we had lots of NBA draft picks, and the team with the most NBA picks flamed out, this one with 2 lottery pciks did too, so maybe it helps less than you think.
You're right. That wasn't the question, though. The question was whether putting guys in the league is a prerequite for good recruiting. Calhoun recruited well and built good teams before he had lots of lottery picks. He doesn't need lottery picks to have good teams, and in fact many of the best lottery picks were not highly ranked coming in.Uconn's Lottery Picks:
Donyell - Sweet Sixteen
Ray - Elite Eight
Rip - National Champion
Caron - Elite Eight
Emeka - National Champion
Ben - National Champion
Charlie - National Champion
Rudy - Elite Eight
Hilton - National Champion
Hasheem - Final Four
Kemba - National Champion
Jeremy - National Champion
Andre - 2nd Round Loss
Our first lottery pick and our most recent lottery pick did not go as far as the Elite Eight in their college career, but every single lottery pick in between did. Seven of the thirteen lottery picks won a National Championship at Uconn. I'd say we usually do pretty well when we have lottery picks on the roster.
Pretending he was somehow more important than Kemba and even Orkiaki in that run is an interesting view. But OK...my view is that his accomplishment while at UConn are on the lower end for our lottery picks. He made some shots, but let's be real. That team began and ended with one guy and it wasn't Jeremy Lamb. Everyone else was backgound music. When it ame time to step into the role as the man, he was nothing more than average, with a tendncy to disapear in some critical moments.