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Well, the Hauser brothers would have gone a long way in having the depth to contend this year. I don't think they liked Howard's attempts per game.
Interesting that there isn't a large amount of NBA talent on that list!
1 Markus Howard Marquette 1,408 2 Lawrence Moten Syracuse 1,405 3 Troy Bell Boston College 1,388 4 Luke Harangody Notre Dame 1,329 5 Terry Dehere Seton Hall 1,320 6 Jeremy Hazell Seton Hall 1,316 7 Chris Mullin St. John's 1,290 8 Kerry Kittles Villanova 1,288 9 Dana Barros Boston College 1,257 10 Felipe Lopez St. John's 1,222 11 Scottie Reynolds Villanova 1,221 12 D'Angelo Harrison St. John's 1,178 13 Bill Curley Boston College 1,177 14 Ryan Gomes Providence 1,173 15 John Wallace Syracuse 1,170 16 Malik Sealy St. John's 1,165 17 Zendon Hamilton St. John's 1,152 18 Danya Abrams Boston College 1,148 19 Eric Murdock Providence 1,145 20 Chris Smith Connecticut 1,140 21 Jamel Thomas Providence 1,135
It is interesting/weird but when you think about it a lot of the best players in league history are big men Ewing, Mourning, Mutombo, Coleman, Okafor, Charles Smith, Thorpe, Seikaly and bigs just don't score as much. Then you have the stud guards/swingmen who left early Iverson, Ray Allen, Carmelo, Rip, Kemba, Caron, Ben, Billy Owens etc.Interesting that there isn't a large amount of NBA talent on that list!
Shabazz’s final year was in the AAC so that would explain why he had fewer Big East points than you expected.Same thing.
The new big east is much softer.
Also, Wes only played three years. Freshman were ineligible back then, I believe.Too bad Wes didn't have a 3pt line.