Boldest Take for the 24-25 season? | Page 2 | The Boneyard

Boldest Take for the 24-25 season?

1. Milaysia Fulwiley blossoms into South Carolina's next All-American and go to player
2. Gamecocks pull off back to back titles and establishes itself as a dynasty
3. Paige wins NPOY
4. Iowa stays relevant in the Big 10 and makes the Sweet 16.
5. Juju Watkins has a tougher sophomore campaign with more defensive attention. USC doesn't make the Final Four either.
6. Notre Dame struggles for a bit with incorporating Hidalgo/Miles in the back court. No Final Four.
7. Texas makes the Final Four
8. Cotie McMahon breaks through as a legitimate All American at Ohio State, same with Flaujae at LSU.
9. LSU is a lot better than people predict, they make the Elite 8 or Final Four.
10. UCLA makes the Final Four this year and has better balance with Rice running the show
 
1. Milaysia Fulwiley blossoms into South Carolina's next All-American and go to player
2. Gamecocks pull off back to back titles and establishes itself as a dynasty
3. Paige wins NPOY
4. Iowa stays relevant in the Big 10 and makes the Sweet 16.
5. Juju Watkins has a tougher sophomore campaign with more defensive attention. USC doesn't make the Final Four either.
6. Notre Dame struggles for a bit with incorporating Hidalgo/Miles in the back court. No Final Four.
7. Texas makes the Final Four
8. Cotie McMahon breaks through as a legitimate All American at Ohio State, same with Flaujae at LSU.
9. LSU is a lot better than people predict, they make the Elite 8 or Final Four.
10. UCLA makes the Final Four this year and has better balance with Rice running the show
LSU take is definitely bold. I personally don’t think Mulkey reloaded well enough. Lost her best forward/rebounder, and she brings in undersized guards + one 6’5 who is apparently a guard, and none of them are all that great at rebounding. Del Rosario will have to make a huge leap for LSU’s post play to even try to be what it was last year.
 
1. Milaysia Fulwiley blossoms into South Carolina's next All-American and go to player
2. Gamecocks pull off back to back titles and establishes itself as a dynasty
3. Paige wins NPOY
4. Iowa stays relevant in the Big 10 and makes the Sweet 16.
5. Juju Watkins has a tougher sophomore campaign with more defensive attention. USC doesn't make the Final Four either.
6. Notre Dame struggles for a bit with incorporating Hidalgo/Miles in the back court. No Final Four.
7. Texas makes the Final Four
8. Cotie McMahon breaks through as a legitimate All American at Ohio State, same with Flaujae at LSU.
9. LSU is a lot better than people predict, they make the Elite 8 or Final Four.
10. UCLA makes the Final Four this year and has better balance with Rice running the show
Where is our friend Tennessee?
 
9. LSU is a lot better than people predict, they make the Elite 8 or Final Four.
I like this bold prediction. Kim is a great coach, whatever faults people find in her, and she may be able to do what Geno did last season: take a depleted team further than anyone expected. It all depends on Flaujae, I think. She’s coming into her own. Can she do what Paige did last season, put a team on her back and carry them through the tournament? If she can, it will be wonderful to see.
 
I like this bold prediction. Kim is a great coach, whatever faults people find in her, and she may be able to do what Geno did last season: take a depleted team further than anyone expected. It all depends on Flaujae, I think. She’s coming into her own. Can she do what Paige did last season, put a team on her back and carry them through the tournament? If she can, it will be wonderful to see.
The combination of her along with Day-Wilson is going to be interesting. Day-Wilson may finally have a guard she can play with that suits her style. How Mulkey leverages her will be something I will be watching this season.
 
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The combination of her along with Day-Wilson is going to be interesting. Day-Wilson may finally have a guard she can play with that suits her style. How Mulkey leverages her will be something I will be watching this season.
Flaujae needs to play off the ball, which means Day-Wilson has to improve her PG decision making and her defense. Otherwise, Kim will go to plan B. This is effectively where they were last season with Van Lith.
 
Flaujae needs to play off the ball, which means Day-Wilson has to improve her PG decision making and her defense. Otherwise, Kim will go to plan B. This is effectively where they were last season with Van Lith.
Agreed. Day-Wilson and her team have been hyping her as the next big WNBA prospect since highschool. This is her last season to prove it.
 
I like this bold prediction. Kim is a great coach, whatever faults people find in her, and she may be able to do what Geno did last season: take a depleted team further than anyone expected. It all depends on Flaujae, I think. She’s coming into her own. Can she do what Paige did last season, put a team on her back and carry them through the tournament? If she can, it will be wonderful to see.
In my opinion, success is more based on how the post turns out. Reese was undoubtedly the best defender, rebounded, and offensive presence down low. Morrow and Del Rosario need to really step it up; they're the X factors for LSU this year. Especially because the SEC is riddled with good post players, defense is absolutely necessary down there. Del Rosario was a bit of a serial fouler every time she got in there from what I remember.
 
In my opinion, success is more based on how the post turns out. Reese was undoubtedly the best defender, rebounded, and offensive presence down low. Morrow and Del Rosario need to really step it up; they're the X factors for LSU this year. Especially because the SEC is riddled with good post players, defense is absolutely necessary down there. Del Rosario was a bit of a serial fouler every time she got in there from what I remember.
I don't necessarily disagree. But I don't think the usual "post's win NCs" formula applies here. It's true that they won the NC largely based on Angel's will to win, but Alexis Morris was even more key in the tournament, and especially in the NC game. Without her, they would not have won anything. This year my prediction is that Morrow will revert to form -- she has a formidable will to score, but it is not at all clear that she has a will to win comparable to Angel's. I just don't see her carrying the team.
 
The combination of her along with Day-Wilson is going to be interesting. Day-Wilson may finally have a guard she can play with that suits her style. How Mulkey leverages her will be something I will be watching this season.
Very possible that losing Reese will improve LSU's chemistry.

LSU has that other forward returning from injury that is pretty good also.

You'd have to say their goal is Final Four.
 
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LSU take is definitely bold. I personally don’t think Mulkey reloaded well enough. Lost her best forward/rebounder, and she brings in undersized guards + one 6’5 who is apparently a guard, and none of them are all that great at rebounding. Del Rosario will have to make a huge leap for LSU’s post play to even try to be what it was last year.

The biggest difference for LSU this year will be chemistry and not having to deal with pressure like they did a year ago. Last year they were all over the place at times between Reese missing several games due to undisclosed reasons, all the Washington Post drama, parents beefing online, etc.

Enter S'Myah Smith who will be an excellent glue player in the post. 6-3, extremely athletic (assuming she fully recovers from her ACL) and is a shot blocking presence inside. She's not Angle Reese but she's a really good PF and was playing phenomenally prior to injury. I see Del Rosario as a backup post player this year.

PG play isn't elite but I'd expect a combination of their guards to be an upgrade over Van Lith who struggled big time on both ends last year. Even if they aren't scoring a ton, as long as they're consistently getting the ball to Flaujae/Morrow/Williams and not turning it over, it will be an upgrade over Van Lith based on how she played last year. I also wouldn't be surprised to see Mikaylah Williams blossom this year similar to how we saw Flaujae improve from freshman to sophomore year.
 
In my opinion, success is more based on how the post turns out. Reese was undoubtedly the best defender, rebounded, and offensive presence down low. Morrow and Del Rosario need to really step it up; they're the X factors for LSU this year. Especially because the SEC is riddled with good post players, defense is absolutely necessary down there. Del Rosario was a bit of a serial fouler every time she got in there from what I remember.
A lot of my prediction is banking on S'Myah Smith coming back healthy. She's a really solid player and could be a difference maker inside going up against bigs like Watkins and Beers. Morrow was quite good this year but will need to emerge as a go to player with Reese out (something I think she's capable of doing).

In terms of rebounding, LSU will still be excellent there. Morrow is an elite rebounder (she averaged a double double starting alongside Reese), and Williams/Flau'jae are outstanding rebounders as guards. Smith too has shown to be a good rebounder.

Reese is a great player who will be missed, but she wasn't very good offensively for LSU this year. If you take out her production against the slew of awful midmajors in the preseason, Angel only shot 44% from the field vs. SEC/ranked/NCAA games which is quite mediocre for a post player who takes 90% of her shots within 8 feet. In the NCAA tournament she only shot 33% overall.

To me, LSU has potential to be better than they were last year due to fixing shortcomings at certain positions even if they don't appear to be as strong on paper. If the offense restructures to have the PG/Smith be glue players who focus on getting the ball to Morrow/Williams/Flau'jae in spots where they can be effective, I think the upside is tremendous for LSU.
 
A lot of my prediction is banking on S'Myah Smith coming back healthy. She's a really solid player and could be a difference maker inside going up against bigs like Watkins and Beers. Morrow was quite good this year but will need to emerge as a go to player with Reese out (something I think she's capable of doing).

In terms of rebounding, LSU will still be excellent there. Morrow is an elite rebounder (she averaged a double double starting alongside Reese), and Williams/Flau'jae are outstanding rebounders as guards. Smith too has shown to be a good rebounder.

Reese is a great player who will be missed, but she wasn't very good offensively for LSU this year. If you take out her production against the slew of awful midmajors in the preseason, Angel only shot 44% from the field vs. SEC/ranked/NCAA games which is quite mediocre for a post player who takes 90% of her shots within 8 feet. In the NCAA tournament she only shot 33% overall.

To me, LSU has potential to be better than they were last year due to fixing shortcomings at certain positions even if they don't appear to be as strong on paper. If the offense restructures to have the PG/Smith be glue players who focus on getting the ball to Morrow/Williams/Flau'jae in spots where they can be effective, I think the upside is tremendous for LSU.
Forgot about Smith. Good point, she was a great post before she was hurt.
 
I like this bold prediction. Kim is a great coach, whatever faults people find in her, and she may be able to do what Geno did last season: take a depleted team further than anyone expected. It all depends on Flaujae, I think. She’s coming into her own. Can she do what Paige did last season, put a team on her back and carry them through the tournament? If she can, it will be wonderful to see.
Mulkey seems to do more with less at times than doing more than more at times. I think they end up better than people expect, she is a great coach, sure she has flaws but they will adjust to what they have. I think last year it was evident how poor the chemistry was. There were way too many distractions going on between internal discipling and obviously Reese brought a lot of attention for better or worse. Hailey pretty much self imploded the team because she was lost in that system on both ends of the floor. That to me killed LSUs chances to get back to a final four. Thats where Kim failed in roster construction last year.

Day-Wilson has things she has to fix but to me she is a much better fit in terms of how LSU likes to play, she is athletic, quick, versatile with the talent. Now its time to put it together. She will have a lot more talent around her now.

I personally think LSU ends up being a more cohesive team this year (chemistry) for a few reasons but no doubt they will miss what Reese brought. If Kim could make chicken noodle soup with that first roster she inherited, this team will be MORE than fine. Now Im not saying they win a national title or win the SEC, but it will be a dangerous team come March. They will probably run the offense through the guards more this year based on what they have.

Samyah Smith staying healthy will be key for them this year. Much like Flaujae, Sa'Myah was poised for giant breakout year. She is a great rim protector, she has a face up game. The core of Morrow, Flaujae, Mikaylah, and Smith is a excellent group, and the addition of Gilbert gives LSU a legit scoring weapon off the bench, something LSU didn't have Kim's first 3 years.

The X factor on the true ceiling of LSU's team will be the development of Rosario and Jersey. I was reading Rosario missed all of last summer to work on her individual development because of a surgery. She trimmed down quite a bit year 1 and gave some good minutes at times, now its time to piece it together skills wise on the court. Jersey is such an intriguing prospect but I never felt Neighbors system fit her. I see LSU making her a stretch forward, she is 6'5, is time to use her physical tools. But she is definitely very talented and capable. We see a lot of highly touted HS prospects transfer only to go on to find success, I hope it works out for Jersey
 
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Forgot about Smith. Good point, she was a great post before she was hurt.
She was a decent post before the injury. Strong, athletic, a rebounder and shot blocker. Not much of a scorer. But maybe she doesn't need to be next to Morrow and Flaujae.
 
1. Milaysia Fulwiley blossoms into South Carolina's next All-American and go to player
2. Gamecocks pull off back to back titles and establishes itself as a dynasty
3. Paige wins NPOY
4. Iowa stays relevant in the Big 10 and makes the Sweet 16.
5. Juju Watkins has a tougher sophomore campaign with more defensive attention. USC doesn't make the Final Four either.
6. Notre Dame struggles for a bit with incorporating Hidalgo/Miles in the back court. No Final Four.
7. Texas makes the Final Four
8. Cotie McMahon breaks through as a legitimate All American at Ohio State, same with Flaujae at LSU.
9. LSU is a lot better than people predict, they make the Elite 8 or Final Four.
10. UCLA makes the Final Four this year and has better balance with Rice running the show
Love this. I agree with the LSU pick. Flaujae looked like the best player on the team at times. It would be great if her role expanded.
I just think ND is too talented. I mean we'll see what their out of conference schedule is like. But Liatu King, Koval, and Karlen would make me think they would be much improved. Then add Olivia Miles. But only 4 teams make the final 4 so I can see it. I also think Hidalgo is so dynamic she can play off the ball.
The thing about the Fulwiley prediction. let's say there are 120 minutes total to divide between the 1-3. You have Paopao, Raven, Fulwiley, T Johnson, Bre Hall. I'm even tempted to throw Chloe at the 3, to put Edwards at the 4 and Watkins at the 5. Long story short will their depth and seniors (basically 3) may prevent Fulwiley from making a jump. This could all be rubbish though cuz LSU added pieces last year and FJ made a jump. So just something im interested in seeing.
Id love for UCLA to make the final 4. They got the talent.
I was hoping Iowa would add one more piece tho I know their roster is pretty full. Its just a tough conference, especially with the additions. But it's an interesting pick!
 
Id love for UCLA to make the final 4. They got the talent.
UCLA's got the talent for sure, but not the coach. Cori choked in big games (PAC-12 Tournament, S16 vs LSU). She flat out looked clueless in the S16 at times, and blew up a a gameplan that was working well in the first half. Supposedly her own players go against her strategy at times. I don't expect them to make the FF unless they end up in a cakewalk bracket.
I just think ND is too talented. I mean we'll see what their out of conference schedule is like. But Liatu King, Koval, and Karlen would make me think they would be much improved. Then add Olivia Miles. But only 4 teams make the final 4 so I can see it. I also think Hidalgo is so dynamic she can play off the ball.
I'm not all in on ND yet.

They're going to be a deeper team for sure, Liatu and Liza are great substitutes for Westbeld or Koval. I only question the backcourt, because with Miles returning, does that push Hannah out of the PG role and into the off ball 2 guard role? Or is it Miles who's off ball? We've seen team chemistry take weeks to form when players return/players need to switch roles with another. It could be the same case here.


I'm not a huge fan of ND so if someone else has a better perspective, share it with me. I'm just going off of stats and what I saw in the few games I watched of them.
 
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For my "Bold Predicition," I think we'll see the two Michigan representatives in the B1G going in opposite directions. Coach Robin Fralick and her Michigan State Spartans, in year two, will continue to get used to her style of play and steadily get better, with Julia Ayrault and Theryn Hallock returning to score, Isaline Alexander back to beef up the front line and transfers Grace Van Slooten, Emma Shumate and Jada Simmons coming aboard.

By contrast, Michigan had a lot of transfers out, including their best player, Laila Phelia. Yes, they have Olivia Olsen and Syla Swords coming in -- two stellar players -- but zounds of depth are now doing that elsewhere.
 
UCLA's got the talent for sure, but not the coach. Cori choked in big games (PAC-12 Tournament, S16 vs LSU). She flat out looked clueless in the S16 at times, and blew up a a gameplan that was working well in the first half. Supposedly her own players go against her strategy at times. I don't expect them to make the FF unless they end up in a cakewalk bracket.

I'm not all in on ND yet.

They're going to be a deeper team for sure, Liatu and Liza are great substitutes for Westbeld or Koval. I only question the backcourt, because with Miles returning, does that push Hannah out of the PG role and into the off ball 2 guard role? Or is it Miles who's off ball? We've seen team chemistry take weeks to form when players return/players need to switch roles with another. It could be the same case here.


I'm not a huge fan of ND so if someone else has a better perspective, share it with me. I'm just going off of stats and what I saw in the few games I watched of them.
Hopefully, I can fill that perspective.

You correctly state that it sometimes takes time to get chemistry with new players or ones in different perspective. I think one can safely say the same for a lot of the leading teams.

However, the teams have time to work this out since they're all back on campus at summer practices. And, in the case of Olivia Miles, she's been practicing on the scout team against the ND 2023 starters since late winter.

I have no concerns whatsoever that Olivia Miles, Hannah Hidalgo and Sonia Citron -- all All-Americans on some team -- will mesh well together. I suspect that Miles will take lead in half-court situations, but Hidalgo will have the ball a lot, too, in pick and roll situations.
Why do I think this will be seamless? First, they're all coached by Niele Ivey, who is one of the better guard coaches in Division 1. She's a former point guard who has worked with pass-first and score-first point guards, so she'll help them mesh. Secondly, both Miles and Hidlago work well with Soni Citron, who may be the best wing-person in the sport. Cerebral and athletic, unselfish yet able to score, she'll help these two mesh.

if there's a place that will take time, it's the front court, bringing in a first-year player in Kate Koval, two transfers in Liatu King and Liza Karlen and the return of Maddy Westbeld. That could take some time, but givesn ND options to go big or smaller and faster.
 
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You want bold?

The National Champion will have not won it before.

Player of the Year is a freshman.

Two Big East Teams reach the Elite 8.
 
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State will not finish the regular season as the highest ranked Triangle Team (it won't be Chapel Hill for any of you wise guys)

Despite mass graduations... High Point will continue to reign as the dominant force in the Big South.

UNCG will return to its rightful place at the top of the Southern Conference

NC A&T will challenge for the top of the CAA
 
You want bold?

The National Champion will have not won it before.

Player of the Year is a freshman.

Two Big East Teams reach the Elite 8.
Big East is wild considering most teams not named UCONN lost their star players (Olsen, Ronsiek, I think someone from Seton Hall left). But I like it.
 
Hmmm...

A university new to the SEC (Texas or Oklahoma), Big 10 (Southern Cal. or UCLA), ACC (Stanford) and Big 12 (Arizona, Colorado, or Utah) will win the regular season conference championship?

I doubt all 4 happen, but I bet at least one of them does.
 
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