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Yes!
Yeah, tcf. But it is one of those weird combination of skills thresholds. Better than "jack of all trades and master of none" but in that direction.If that is what he said, statistically speaking, it's hard to argue with him. Would be hard to find another UConn player with 800+ points, 580+ rebounds and 290+ assists in their first two seasons.
Making a steal = BBIQ
Damn I used to steal a lot of BBs when I was playing as a kid = I must be a genius!!!!
Ater Majok comes to mind.
All I have to say is don't let the door hit you on your way out. I typically don't begrudge players for leaving early and doing what's best for them, particularly if their stock is peaking, but this just feels like abandoning the team. After watching him in frustration for two years, thinking he may actually fill his potential next year, he bolts. Sorry, but when I look back on the former players, he just isn't going to feel to me like a special part of the Husky family.
I was surprised to hear that he decided to go all I for the NBA draft, especially after seeing players like Buddy Hield improving his stock by returning for his senior year. I think DHam has a lot of upside, and had a great opportunity to improve his game by being surrounded by more offensive weapons this coming season. Having to force his offense so often due to having a few players on the team that could create their own shot contributed to his poor shooting percentage. I think it's a big mistake for him leaving early, but hopefully he'll get drafted somewhere and have an opportunity to develop his game and prove himself while earning a big paycheck. Seems like a good kid, so I wish him well.The bottom line is that if he really didn't want to stay here any longer, it was the right move both for him and for us. I don't think he sealed his fate, but I think he has gone a long way towards lowering his ceiling. It has been established that his decision was against KO's advice, which I don't take to have been selfish--i.e., I believe that KO honestly thought it was best for Hamilton's pro prospects if he stayed another year. Personally, I'm deferring to KO as having better insight on that.
Everyone assumes that DHam will improve if the stays another year.
NBA drafts on player potential.
If DHam stays and does not improve significantly, does he then also forfeit his value of potential?
If he has a bad year, then he is forced to stay for his senior year and he really has to live up to his potential.
If someone decides his potential is untapped, he could get drafted and get a nice payday.
Then he can work on his game in order to stick.
DHam may be making the right decision.
has Ollie commented yet? I haven't seen (or found) anything
it's plausible he's trying to reach out to the kid to convince him to reconsider, for his own good
he has the potential to move up the charts big time, it happens
I was surprised to hear that he decided to go all I for the NBA draft, especially after seeing players like Buddy Hield improving his stock by returning for his senior year. I think DHam has a lot of upside, and had a great opportunity to improve his game by being surrounded by more offensive weapons this coming season. Having to force his offense so often due to having a few players on the team that could create their own shot contributed to his poor shooting percentage. I think it's a big mistake for him leaving early, but hopefully he'll get drafted somewhere and have an opportunity to develop his game and prove himself while earning a big paycheck. Seems like a good kid, so I wish him well.
It's like you go out of your way to have no clue at all times.The "getting drafted on potential" ship has sailed on DHam, if it was ever in port in the first place. Centers and maybe the top 3-4 athletes in a class get drafted on potential, everyone else has to be able to play from day one. Players like Hamilton that are kind of tall and kind of quick for their size and maybe have some shooting ability are dime a dozen in the NBA.
I wish DHam luck, and recommend he learn to speak Turkish or Russian or Chinese. He is going to need it.
Everyone assumes that DHam will improve if the stays another year.
NBA drafts on player potential.
If DHam stays and does not improve significantly, does he then also forfeit his value of potential?
If he has a bad year, then he is forced to stay for his senior year and he really has to live up to his potential.
If someone decides his potential is untapped, he could get drafted and get a nice payday.
Then he can work on his game in order to stick.
DHam may be making the right decision.
I think at most he's risking a year of pro earning potential (which could be in an oversea or D-League setting) but I think by doing this, he's throwing away the chance at a much higher payout next year. IMO, he doesn't have the physical tools that would make teams overlook a lot of his flaws and draft him high this year so I think that negates a lot of what you're talking about. We shall see though.
All I have to say is don't let the door hit you on your way out. I typically don't begrudge players for leaving early and doing what's best for them, particularly if their stock is peaking, but this just feels like abandoning the team. After watching him in frustration for two years, thinking he may actually fill his potential next year, he bolts. Sorry, but when I look back on the former players, he just isn't going to feel to me like a special part of the Husky family.
Now if jack feels the same way you just wasted a nano second with your offhanded insult. But if it makes you feel better I liked it. Not that you or anyone else should care what I think, I think.You don't need to apologize because no one cares what you think.
Someone clarified that comment was referencing they were still in the agent selection process and not wavering. Hopefully they were wrong but evidence prior to that tweet supports their claim.It's been awfully quiet since the Dinos Trigonis comment on Twitter. Is DHam wavering? No buzz with Vital, Simon, Jackson others. Hope Ollie has a plan brewing with involves Rodney.