The bottom line to me is if Mullins, Khamenia, Demary, and Hines are as good as we think, Ross or Landrew play well, and County, Junior Ross, and others we bring in play adequately, we're loaded and too focused on having two starting level players at each position. When has that ever been the case besides 2024?
There's always a lot of comments here about "in Hurley we trust", "we don't know what the coaches know", "Hurley is the best coach in the game" yet, for example, here we are getting nervous about who will be brought in as the backup center.
Reading all the comments about what we need and how many holes there are in every players' game is hilarious when you look at the box score for the 1999 Championship game (posted below but hard to read because the column headings don't align with the numbers).
We won the National Championship by defeating "the greatest team in the history of basketball", a team so loaded many were gushing how Duke's second team could probably win it, yet:
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our starting center played 28 minutes and
had 2 points and 3 rebounds;.
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backup center played 8 minutes and
had 4 points and 0 rebounds; so we had a
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total of 6 points and 3 rebounds from our center position in the National Championship game.
Should anyone think that was a fluke win, we were 34-2 that year and Jake averaged 5.5 points and 6.4 rebounds for the year, his junior year, playing 21.4 minutes per game.
For a comparison with Hines,
Jake averaged 4.0 points and 5.5 rebounds in 20.5 minutes his freshman year, while
Hines averaged 6.5 points and 5.5 rebounds in 18.0 minutes his freshman year.
Tarris Reed averaged 3.4 points and 3.9 rebounds in 12.6 minutes his freshman year and
Emeka Okafor averaged 7.9 points and 9.0 rebounds in 30.0 minutes his freshman year.
Oscar Giltay averaged 3.3 points and 4.1 rebounds in 14.6 minutes.......so maybe he or
Machot or one of the other guys we're linked to will be better than some think.
Connecticut (34-2)