JUCOs are a way to fill an immediate hole or jump start a program. I expect that Wiggins bringing along the Landers duo from Trinity Valley is a way to do just that. TVCC just one the National Championship and had a pretty good track record.
Marquette brought in some JUCOs... but they're primarily a stop gap.
Flashback:
If asked, Lady Vols assistant coach Dean Lockwood can offer a “Reader’s Digest” version of how the 5’2” Bobbitt became Tennessee’s starting point guard: “Necessity,” he quoted, “is the mother of invention.”
The slightly longer version of the story starts with the UT program engaging is some pre-season self-reflection in the face of injuries and a player’s unexpected transfer. “We didn’t have the type of point guard play that we felt we needed to go all the way,” explained Lockwood. True, they had been able to camouflage it in the past, ask other players to step up, but they were all aware they needed to solve the problem of that missing piece. “One of the things we talked about was the immediate help that could come in from the junior college ranks.”
This was new territory for the program but Lockwood, who had worked with several JUCOs on the men’s side, had experienced what he called “both the bitter and the sweet” of the process. There was much discussion about the risks, of chemistry issues, pressure, timing and expectations. Most junior college players only have two years of eligibility, so in all honesty they should enter a program where they’re expected to — and can — start. They also have to “get it” right away, said Lockwood.