The Bronx borders Connecticut.
Here's a pic of Ollie, Miller and K-Free on the recruiting trail.
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Technically, it only borders Westchester County and Marble Hill. But still plenty close enough.
Oh I'm not knocking the guy. He did good work for us. He's not Gibbs, but that's OK.RJ Evans, at a high Major level, was outmatched physically. On the other hand, if you want to ask whether RJ Evan's presence in 12-13 make us a materially better team than we would have been without him, the answer is absolutely yes. He contributed to some wins (against lower level competition and then at the end against Providence) with his play, but his leadership all year was a key part of what made that team exceed expectations.
Yeah I wasn't ruling us out in the process of throwing St. Johns out there. More like, who are we competing with if he's staying close to home?That was one of those posts that got aborted before finishing and then when I replied to someone else, it got swept into it. (You managed to reply in the 10 seconds it took me to edit the post.) Yeah, I was going to say "practically" borders CT, but then I thought, who cares?
Not to derail this thread even further, but what exactly is the basis for this?
+1I am going to have to agree with Businesslawyer. Kromah was a vital piece of the 2014 championship team. Despite Drummond's immense talent and potential, his presence didn't make the 2011-12 team better.
Well when you can't get the one-and-dones, you have to make do with what's around. It bothers some that we're scrounging for spare parts, but given the circumstances what else should we do? "Get the top targets" isn't an option -- they're signed to play elsewhere.
Duke won a title this year with major contributions from one-and-done freshman. That is not a trend, and you should not treat it as such. If Wisconsin had pulled it out, would that mean that one-and-dones don't work?
The key to winning in college basketball is to have good players on your team. Whether those players are one-and-dones or veteran players, and whether those veteran players are transfers or were recruited out of high school, does not change your ability to win games.
Have to be fair here. Using Larrier as a hypothetical example, he wouldn't even be considering coming to UConn if Shaka were still at VCU. Gibbs wouldn't be considering UConn if Seton Hall weren't a train wreck. Miller wouldn't be here if the Ivy League didn't have an antiquated rule.
So the influx of potential talent is more about getting lucky with guys leaving other programs that they initially chose over UConn. It doesn't matter in terms of what the roster looks like as a whole, but getting guys on the bounce-back isn't as sustainable as getting them straight out of high school. Especially if the grad transfer rule goes away.
UChusky916 said:. 4 pages for this thread and we don't have a single report of UConn being mentioned with this kid. Only speculation of a kid that looked like a basketball player on campus with Miller, who could legit be anyone. Everyone needs to relax and let things play out.
3uconn said:He was NOT on campus today.
Better a band aid than a gapping bloody hole.Assuming that we're going to get two players that we do not currently have, trying to make a living off of other programs' misfortune is not a sound long-term strategy.
The fifth-year players are nice band-aids to cover the failings of the recruiting trail, but it really just kicks the problem down the road by a year.
It was Diarra.He was NOT on campus today.
It wasn't Drummonds fault but by adding him we screwed up the chemistry. Alex just stopped playing and then the transfers happened.Opinion, obviously. But what is it based on? That team underperformed its talent level by more than any team in UConn history. Why? It's chemistry sucked. Kids didn't play together or always hard. Why? Without Drummond, we returned 4 starters and the sixth man (Bazz) from a championship team, and added Boat and Daniels. We would have started AO, Tyler, Roscoe, Lamb and Bazz. After 5 minutes, like the year before, Tyler comes out (for Boat instead of Bazz), Roscoe slides up to the 4 and Lamb the 3, and we still have Giffey (if not DAniels). When Drummond comes, not enough minutes and not at the right positions. AO feels disrespected and can't figure out how to coexist with Drummond on the floor (and all year, AO when Drummond was out was more effective than when Drummond was in), Roscoe now is stuck at the 3 where he's not nearly as effective, almost drops out of the rotation completely and wants out. Daniels doesn't have minutes available for him, doesn't get better as the year progresses and drops out of the rotation. And you have too many players sulking and not playing with the fire and heart and D that had already won them a championship.
Was that Drummond's fault. Almost entirely not. Did it utterly end up destroying the morale and chemistry of what was easily a Top 20 team? Yup.
People are free to disagree -- you can't prove what would have happened -- but that's how I see it.
Based on what?It sounds like he's heading to St. John's.
MDK - which team won it all?Business lawyer you have got to be kidding me. A year of kromah over a year of Drummond. What drugs are you on we all need some
Opinion, obviously. But what is it based on? That team underperformed its talent level by more than any team in UConn history. Why? It's chemistry sucked. Kids didn't play together or always hard. Why? Without Drummond, we returned 4 starters and the sixth man (Bazz) from a championship team, and added Boat and Daniels. We would have started AO, Tyler, Roscoe, Lamb and Bazz. After 5 minutes, like the year before, Tyler comes out (for Boat instead of Bazz), Roscoe slides up to the 4 and Lamb the 3, and we still have Giffey (if not DAniels). When Drummond comes, not enough minutes and not at the right positions. AO feels disrespected and can't figure out how to coexist with Drummond on the floor (and all year, AO when Drummond was out was more effective than when Drummond was in), Roscoe now is stuck at the 3 where he's not nearly as effective, almost drops out of the rotation completely and wants out. Daniels doesn't have minutes available for him, doesn't get better as the year progresses and drops out of the rotation. And you have too many players sulking and not playing with the fire and heart and D that had already won them a championship.
Was that Drummond's fault. Almost entirely not. Did it utterly end up destroying the morale and chemistry of what was easily a Top 20 team? Yup.
People are free to disagree -- you can't prove what would have happened -- but that's how I see it.