I’m expecting we’ll see a lot of Stewart, but if he doesn’t have it today or gets foul trouble I bet we see Isaiah. I think he’s got something but obviously the freshman aside from Liam haven’t gotten much burn since the buy games.He is McNeeley’s size and floor position? Aside from Stew I wonder if he has shown enough in practice to contribute now? Can he defend? Can he shoot and rebound?
Yeah, I basically have a line in my nightly prayers that we get to see each of these kids for 60-80 minutes this season. At least gives a barometer for where they are developmentally. At best, a star is born.Hard for two-way alpha guys like IA/AN to be satisfied on the bench. Hope the opportunity presents itself for them to get some run in January as rotations are changed post-Liam injury. Abraham can bring some high-level energy to board and play D
I’ll be surprised if Nowell plays today unless we are up by 20+ points. Mahaney will get increased minutes too.I'm sure Abraham is ready, but I'd expect all of McNeeley's minutes to be going to Nowell, Stewart, Ross before him
I nailed it per usual. Mahaney needs to play 20+ minutes per game.I’ll be surprised if Nowell plays today unless we are up by 20+ points. Mahaney will get increased minutes too.
His shoulder is still bothering himI nailed it per usual. Mahaney needs to play 20+ minutes per game.
Doubtful - I do wonder if there is a part of Hurley that stays true to pecking order, and waiting your turn. There is something to be said about keeping peace in the locker room culture and giving kids who have waited their turn and stuck, time. As such a deep culture guy, guessing he knows the overall unrest that comes with benching a sophomore who was probably promised time, for a freshman. That can get rotten and contagious fast, and important to keep harmony to ensure your team is bought in.Can he be any worse offensively than Ross?
Doubt that is factoring in here. Seems totally antithetical to the culture that Hurley has created here that nothing is promised and everything earned. I have no doubt there is a vision here that Hurley feels gives the team the best chance to win base on what he’s seeing in practices.Doubtful - I do wonder if there is a part of Hurley that stays true to pecking order, and waiting your turn. There is something to be said about keeping peace in the locker room culture and giving kids who have waited their turn and stuck, time. As such a deep culture guy, guessing he knows the overall unrest that comes with benching a sophomore who was probably promised time, for a freshman. That can get rotten and contagious fast, and important to keep harmony to ensure your team is bought in.
Agree in many respects, and I do think Hurley generally runs a meritocracy, but part of me thinks if it’s close, he sticks with seniority as not to upset the apple cart. Obviously he has Liam in there over sophs, but it’s easy to validate that move especially if transparent about it early and set expectations.Doubt that is factoring in here. Seems totally antithetical to the culture that Hurley has created here that nothing is promised and everything earned. I have no doubt there is a vision here that Hurley feels gives the team the best chance to win base on what he’s seeing in practices.
I can’t get too worked up over Abraham’s minutes because in reality, we’ve only seen him against (let’s be honest) total scrub teams. He’s looked really good but Ross also looked really good against those squads. It’s just hard to read too much into those type of games.
Totally agree on your assessments on Isiah and Jayden.Agree in many respects, and I do think Hurley generally runs a meritocracy, but part of me thinks if it’s close, he sticks with seniority as not to upset the apple cart. Obviously he has Liam in there over sophs, but it’s easy to validate that move especially if transparent about it early and set expectations.
From what I saw live, Isiah is a more talented player than Jayden, traits wise. Jayden looked awkward last year to me, and he remains awkward this year. Meanwhile Isiah has a great looking 3, is every bit the athlete, same size but looks stronger, and a more natural looking basketball player. It is hard to say because we’ve seen so little.
Hurley wants to win. That’s it. Ross has a motor and can cut and defend, that’s why Hurley likes him over Stewart, who seems to be more of a pro style player and should be able to score and rebound. But the defense gotta be better.Totally agree on your assessments on Isiah and Jayden.
I thought this in the open practice in November. I really think he's going to be a major contributer in the next couple years and a fan favorite. He seems to have a confident intensity about him.From what I saw live, Isiah is a more talented player than Jayden, traits wise. Jayden looked awkward last year to me, and he remains awkward this year. Meanwhile Isiah has a great looking 3, is every bit the athlete, same size but looks stronger, and a more natural looking basketball player. It is hard to say because we’ve seen so little.
I agree. I've been a strong Ross proponent but he doesn't seem to have "game". He's athletic, is supposed to be a great shooter, was given great praise by DH for what he did last summer in workouts, but it hasn't yet translated during real games.Agree in many respects, and I do think Hurley generally runs a meritocracy, but part of me thinks if it’s close, he sticks with seniority as not to upset the apple cart. Obviously he has Liam in there over sophs, but it’s easy to validate that move especially if transparent about it early and set expectations.
From what I saw live, Isiah is a more talented player than Jayden, traits wise. Jayden looked awkward last year to me, and he remains awkward this year. Meanwhile Isiah has a great looking 3, is every bit the athlete, same size but looks stronger, and a more natural looking basketball player. It is hard to say because we’ve seen so little.
Glad you said that because it has been in the back of my mind for a long time. Along with the immediacy of winning each game there can be trade-offs such as you have mentioned which is the overall strategies and how tactical decisions are influenced by that as well as what the staff has committed to recruits. It seems like he actually gives players themselves the decision by how they perform in practice as well as games. He has to be trustworthy to them and himself.Doubtful - I do wonder if there is a part of Hurley that stays true to pecking order, and waiting your turn. There is something to be said about keeping peace in the locker room culture and giving kids who have waited their turn and stuck, time. As such a deep culture guy, guessing he knows the overall unrest that comes with benching a sophomore who was probably promised time, for a freshman. That can get rotten and contagious fast, and important to keep harmony to ensure your team is bought in.
There is something to be said about it until said player proves he shouldn't deserve those minutes. I think we have reached that point with Ross. He has somehow managed to get worse the more minutes he has gotten. I see no reason why Abraham shouldn't at least get a shot.Doubtful - I do wonder if there is a part of Hurley that stays true to pecking order, and waiting your turn. There is something to be said about keeping peace in the locker room culture and giving kids who have waited their turn and stuck, time. As such a deep culture guy, guessing he knows the overall unrest that comes with benching a sophomore who was probably promised time, for a freshman. That can get rotten and contagious fast, and important to keep harmony to ensure your team is bought in.
Based on the void of minutes Ahmad is seeing in a situation where we could really use him, I’m not confident IA is going to see the floor much this year.There is something to be said about it until said player proves he shouldn't deserve those minutes. I think we have reached that point with Ross. He has somehow managed to get worse the more minutes he has gotten. I see no reason why Abraham shouldn't at least get a shot.