Apr 08, 2013 12:09 AM EDT 
Click here for Part 1.
|
Rank
|
Team
|
Conf
|
Pred Off
|
Pred Def
|
Pred Pyth
|
Ret Min
|
Ret Poss
|
T100
|
Last Pyth
|
|
11
|
Virginia
|
ACC
|
109.8
|
89.6
|
0.8891
|
88%
|
90%
|
5
|
0.8591
|
|
12
|
Georgetown
|
BE
|
107.4
|
87.7
|
0.8883
|
83%
|
80%
|
7
|
0.9168
|
|
13
|
Iowa
|
B10
|
111.4
|
91.1
|
0.8872
|
89%
|
93%
|
2
|
0.8811
|
|
14
|
Ohio St.
|
B10
|
105.6
|
86.4
|
0.8868
|
74%
|
69%
|
6
|
0.9443
|
|
15
|
Colorado
|
P12
|
111.8
|
91.5
|
0.8860
|
84%
|
89%
|
3
|
0.8200
|
|
16
|
Memphis
|
AAC
|
110.7
|
90.7
|
0.8855
|
70%
|
73%
|
7
|
0.8399
|
|
17
|
Creighton
|
BE
|
119.1
|
97.6
|
0.8841
|
86%
|
86%
|
0
|
0.8987
|
|
18
|
Connecticut
|
AAC
|
112.0
|
92.0
|
0.8820
|
93%
|
95%
|
5
|
0.8115
|
|
19
|
Syracuse
|
ACC
|
108.4
|
89.2
|
0.8807
|
53%
|
46%
|
8
|
0.9448
|
|
20
|
UCLA
|
P12
|
112.2
|
92.4
|
0.8800
|
67%
|
65%
|
8
|
0.8202
|
|
21
|
Alabama
|
SEC
|
106.8
|
87.9
|
0.8799
|
95%
|
95%
|
7
|
0.7969
|
|
22
|
Pittsburgh
|
ACC
|
110.4
|
91.6
|
0.8711
|
59%
|
58%
|
4
|
0.9345
|
|
23
|
New Mexico
|
MWC
|
106.8
|
88.7
|
0.8700
|
68%
|
70%
|
1
|
0.8745
|
|
24
|
Tennessee
|
SEC
|
112.1
|
93.5
|
0.8652
|
79%
|
85%
|
5
|
0.7419
|
|
25
|
Kansas
|
B12
|
106.3
|
89.4
|
0.8553
|
25%
|
25%
|
7
|
0.9383
|
Virginia: I am worried about this Virginia projection. It depends critically on how Top 100 recruit, freshman point guard London Perrantes plays. But on paper, everything is coming together for Virginia. They have their three top scorers (really the only guys who scored at all), back from last year. Former Top 100 recruit Mike Tobey should be ready for that sophomore year leap in production. They add depth with South Carolina transfer Anthony Gill. Malcolm Brogdon (who missed the entire season) and Darion Atkins should be back healthy. And Virginia played very good basketball in conference games last year.
Georgetown: Greg Whittington should return from an academic suspension, incoming transfer Josh Smith is a dominant offensive player, and Georgetown brings back the majority of the players from a dominant defensive team. Thus picking the Hoyas for the Top 25 makes sense even without Otto Porter. But I am very concerned how much the offense will depend on mid-year transfer Josh Smith. Smith is a natural offensive player, and seems like the perfect high-post player to make the Georgetown offense flow. But will he be able to integrate into the lineup (and get in shape) for a 3 month run? Statistically he looks like a good fit, but betting on Josh Smith has been a bad bet the last two seasons.
Iowa: Iowa isn’t going to blow you out of the water with Top 100 recruits. But the majority of the lineup that went to the NIT final will be back. The time for winning is now. Don’t forget that the team welcomes Wisconsin transfer Jarrod Uthoff.
Ohio St: The loss of DeShaun Thomas shouldn’t hurt the Buckeye defense that much. And because players like Sam Thompson and LaQuinton Ross are only starting to show signs of how good they can be, the offense might not slip that much either.
Colorado: Another very young but talented team last year. People are raving about how good Josh Scott could be in 2013-2014.
Memphis: The five Memphis seniors are great players and this might be Josh Pastner’s best team. But the addition of a dominant recruiting class should be the x-factor that gets the team deeper into the tournament this year. If Tarik Black transfers (which is speculated), Memphis might fall a little bit in these projections, but not that much. This team has depth.
Creighton: They are only here if Doug McDermott comes back.
Connecticut: The best thing about your seniors transferring out is that all your main talent has eligibility left.
Syracuse: On paper they have the pieces they need to replace their departing stars. Duke transfer Michael Gbinije should be a nice wing player to replace James Southerland. Tyler Ennis can step in at point-guard. But if Michael Carter-Williams isn’t back (what I project above), Trevor Cooney is still going to be logging major minutes. The lack of options on the perimeter is still a concern.
UCLA: The Wear twins are going to be seniors next year. It only seems like we’ve been talking about them forever because of the transfer season. I’m assuming Kyle Anderson sticks around, because where is he going to go? Between Anderson, a healthy Jordan Adams, and a more developed Tony Parker, UCLA has enough talent to compete for a Pac-12 title again. This may seem like a low ranking given what UCLA brings back, but remember UCLA was only 47th in the Pomeroy Rankings last year. I’m predicting they will be better on offense and defense.
Alabama: This might be my most unorthodox Top 25 pick. Anthony Grant teaches outstanding defense, so Alabama will always be competitive in that area. And Bama brings just about everyone back, so expect a more coherent offense from the start of the season. There is no excuse for losing to Mercer or Tulane this season. The model particularly expects Devonta Pollard to take a big step forward. The freshman forward often looked unprepared last year, but he was a Top 25 recruit out of high school, and he should develop into a more polished post player. Plus Alabama adds two more Top 100 forwards to the rotation, which should help as well. My biggest concern is that far too often in recent seasons, Grant’s returning upperclassman haven’t delivered. Last year it was Andrew Steele’s injuries that caused him to fall apart and miss the end of the season. In previous seasons it was off-court issues that derailed the team. But on paper, there is no reason Alabama shouldn’t take a step forward and become an elite team next year.
Pittsburgh: It really helps that Pittsburgh can develop underclassmen to replace its seniors. Tray Woodall is gone, but James Robinson played point guard very well last season, and should keep the team playing at a high level.
New Mexico: The starting five from the MWC champs could have been back if not for the early entry of Tony Snell. But even without Snell or head coach Steve Alford, the experience the other four starters have working together should ensure another strong season. New head coach Craig Neal might not have the most credentials, but all he has to do is make sure the starters don’t transfer, and New Mexico will compete for a MWC championship again.
Tennessee: The preseason loss of Jeronne Maymon derailed Tennessee’s plans. But with Maymon, Jarnell Stokes, Trae Golden, and Jordan McRae, Tennessee has an impressive lineup coming back.
Kansas: A very good comparison for the 2014 Jayhawks might be the 2013 Tar Heels. I fully expect Bill Self to make Perry Ellis into a high volume scorer next season, just as I thought James McAdoo would become a star last year. And there are some impact recruits like Wayne Selden. But this is still a complete rebuild on offense. Bill Self’s teams always play outstanding defense, and he’ll need that to stay in the Top 25. Kansas could desperately use Andrew Wiggins to commit to the school if they want to win a 10th straight Big 12 title, but it helps that the rest of the conference should be down next year.
Missing
Wichita St.: Last year Gregg Marshall returned only 35% of his minutes so with 54% of his minutes returning this year, winning should be a piece of cake. Seriously, if he can build another dominant team with unheralded recruits, he might be the best coach on the planet.
Indiana: The Hoosiers have a lot of good pieces, but the model doesn’t like how they fit together. It concludes based on last year’s substitution patterns that Yogi Ferrell, Jeremy Hollowell, Remy Abell, and Will Sheehey will see plenty of action. And they just aren’t the most effective offensive players. Ideally the younger players will see a lot of playing time early, and some of them will become stars, but it should be a transition year.
Miami: The Hurricanes don’t have enough incoming talent to replace what they lose.
Providence: The model questions whether Ed Cooley is a good enough defensive coach. Personally, based on what Providence did late in the year, I think they probably will have a solid defensive team next season. But getting elite talent to commit to defense isn’t easy. It certainly didn’t happen in January this year. And if Ricardo Ledo goes pro, they aren’t even in the conversation.
VCU: Troy Daniels (and his 124 made three pointers) is gone, and this isn’t a team loaded with elite talent. But the system should keep them in the Top 25 discussion again next year.
St. Louis: Very close.
Gonzaga: Sam Dower was a solid backup forward, but it is really asking too much for him to replace Kelly Olynyk and Elias Harris. Losing two high volume shooters is going to lower the efficiency of all the returning players.
Oregon: They lose a ton of value with their seniors. They could have really used that Aaron Gordon commitment.
Mississippi: Marshall Henderson is back, but three key starters are gone.
UNLV: Mike Moser may be transferring to Washington, but even if Moser comes back, they lost a lot of production this off-season.
St. John’s: D’Angelo Harrison says he wants to return to the team, and they will be better than people think.
Maryland: Even without Alex Len they will be an upper division ACC team.
Villanova: Lots of solid pieces.
Coming in the next three months:
1) Updated rankings when early entrant decisions become final.
2) Where the lineup-based model went right and wrong in year one, and how it can be improved.
3) Conference projections for the top conferences. See the shockingly low projections for teams like Temple and Oregon.
LaQuinton Ross, Ohio State Buckeyes, Georgetown Hoyas, Virginia Cavaliers, Iowa Hawkeyes, Colorado Buffaloes, Memphis Tigers, Creighton Bluejays, Connecticut Huskies, Syracuse Orange, UCLA Bruins, Alabama Crimson Tide, Pittsburgh Panthers, New Mexico Lobos, Tennessee Volunteers, Kansas Jayhawks, NCAA Jan 29, 2013 11:10 AM EST Click Here for Part 1.
|
Team
|
Adj Off
|
Adj Def
|
W
|
L
|
Pyth.
|
|
Northwestern
|
103.7
|
93.0
|
7
|
3
|
0.7542
|
|
Northwestern (without Drew Crawford)
|
105.9
|
96.2
|
5
|
6
|
0.7277
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Providence (missing players)
|
103.1
|
90.7
|
8
|
4
|
0.7874
|
|
Providence (Full Strength)
|
111.2
|
98.7
|
2
|
6
|
0.7735
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
North Dakota St.
|
108.0
|
91.8
|
13
|
3
|
0.8405
|
|
North Dakota St. (without Taylor Braun)
|
97.7
|
90.7
|
1
|
2
|
0.6819
|
Northwestern has been able to compensate for Drew Crawford’s lost offense, but they have not been able to compensate for the athleticism he brought to the defense. He was one of the only players with the quickness and size to frustrate opposing wing players.
Providence has had a nightmare of a season. First Kris Dunn was injured. Then Vincent Council was out. Plus, Bryce Cotton has missed games occasionally. And yet with one or more of those players out at the start of the season, Ed Cooley got his players to buy in and play team basketball. They knew they had to play great defense to have a chance, and the players responded. But now that everyone is at full-strength, the defensive commitment just isn’t there. Pretty much from the moment that Kris Dunn debuted, Providence has stopped playing defense. And the team has gone 2-6 since then.
North Dakota St. was one of the true surprises of the early season. They were extremely dominant and looked like a real challenger to Nate Wolter’s South Dakota St. team for the Summit League title. But the injury to leading scorer Taylor Braun has completely derailed NDSU’s offense.
|
Team
|
Adj Off
|
Adj Def
|
W
|
L
|
Pyth.
|
|
Georgetown
|
97.8
|
85.2
|
10
|
3
|
0.8055
|
|
Georgetown (without Greg Whittington)
|
110.0
|
83.4
|
4
|
1
|
0.9445
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Memphis (without Geron Johnson)
|
102.4
|
97.9
|
2
|
1
|
0.6136
|
|
Memphis (without Tarik Black)
|
114.1
|
95.3
|
4
|
0
|
0.8637
|
|
Memphis (Full Strength)
|
102.1
|
86.2
|
10
|
2
|
0.8508
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
North Carolina
|
106.3
|
90.4
|
9
|
4
|
0.8401
|
|
North Carolina (without Leslie McDonald)
|
110.2
|
91.5
|
3
|
2
|
0.8709
|
This next group features three players whose absence was not a huge problem. Georgetown sat at 0-2 in the Big East and had just been blown out at home by Pittsburgh when they found out Greg Whittington was academically ineligible. Since then the Hoyas have gone 4-1 including an upset of Louisville over the weekend. Georgetown’s improvement without Greg Whittington is a little bit of a surprise, but likely has two causes. First, with Whittington academically ineligible, the Hoyas have stopped rolling out one-guard lineups. The offense has simply moved more crisply with two guards on the floor at once. I appreciated John Thompson III’s creativity with four forwards on the floor, but there is a reason most teams don’t do that. Second, un-related to the suspension of Whittington, head coach John Thompson III has stopped trying to run the offense through center Michael Hopkins. Hopkins was the team’s least efficient offensive player, and Hopkins playing time has plummeted in recent games.
Memphis had its best offensive day of the season (against Tennessee) when Tarik Black was out, but I wouldn’t necessarily be convinced that the team is better off without him. That seems like a bit of a fluke.
North Carolina hasn’t really missed Leslie McDonald and I don’t think anyone is surprised. North Carolina has a plethora of two-guard/wing players. What the Tar Heels are missing is a second legitimate post-player to compliment James Michael McAdoo. PJ Hairston and Reggie Bullock were well-positioned to replace McDonald’s playing time.
|
Team
|
Adj Off
|
Adj Def
|
W
|
L
|
Pyth.
|
|
UNLV (without Khem Birch)
|
108.1
|
87.0
|
7
|
1
|
0.9025
|
|
UNLV (Birch but no healthy Mike Moser)
|
109.9
|
91.2
|
5
|
1
|
0.8707
|
|
UNLV (Full Strength)
|
112.5
|
90.1
|
3
|
2
|
0.9075
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Virginia
|
105.1
|
90.0
|
7
|
3
|
0.8298
|
|
Virginia (with Jontel Evans)
|
99.7
|
83.0
|
4
|
2
|
0.8675
|
|
Virginia (with Jontel Evans without Darion Atkins)
|
109.8
|
78.3
|
3
|
0
|
0.9696
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Washington (without Andrew Andrews)
|
109.4
|
110.3
|
2
|
1
|
0.4788
|
|
Washington (without Scott Suggs)
|
103.9
|
100.3
|
2
|
1
|
0.5911
|
|
Washington (Full Strength)
|
109.3
|
95.3
|
8
|
6
|
0.8035
|
I took a little liberty and grouped the North Carolina game in the “Moser-injured” category because he clearly wasn’t 100%. The good news for UNLV fans is that they are a better team with Moser in the lineup. The bad news is that even with the team at full-strength, they have only been a borderline Top 25 team. UNLV has Top 10 talent, and Anthony Bennett might be the best freshmen in the country, but they haven’t quite been able to put it all together.
Virginia’s splits aren’t really about Evans so much as they are about a team that has improved throughout the season. The Cavaliers started out playing mediocre basketball, began to play better defense once they added a PG with the quickness of Evans, and even with Darion Atkins going down they have continued to improve. That last split probably isn’t sustainable, but Virginia is the rare team that can say they are playing much better now than in November.
Although you might not guess it from their 8-6 record, the Washington Huskies have been at their best at full-strength.
|
Team
|
Adj Off
|
Adj Def
|
W
|
L
|
Pyth.
|
|
Miami (without Durand Scott)
|
96.8
|
100.1
|
2
|
1
|
0.4163
|
|
Miami (without Reggie Johnson)
|
104.8
|
85.2
|
6
|
2
|
0.8931
|
|
Miami (Full Strength)
|
119.0
|
78.2
|
7
|
0
|
0.9867
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
St. John's
|
101.3
|
91.1
|
9
|
3
|
0.7462
|
|
St. John's (with Jamal Branch)
|
99.2
|
92.7
|
4
|
4
|
0.6678
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Creighton
|
118.7
|
93.5
|
7
|
1
|
0.9201
|
|
Creighton (without Josh Jones)
|
120.7
|
91.1
|
11
|
2
|
0.9471
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Lehigh
|
110.8
|
99.6
|
8
|
4
|
0.7499
|
|
Lehigh (without CJ McCollum)
|
102.0
|
92.9
|
5
|
1
|
0.7230
|
Durand Scott missed Miami (FL)'s loss to Florida Gulf Coast early in the season. And Reggie Johnson just missed a string of games and hasn’t quite looked 100% since returning. Miami has only had their full-lineup for 7 games, but when you include a blow-out win against Duke in that sample of seven games, you look pretty good.
I’m not sure mid-season transfer Jamal Branch has been a negative influence on St. John’s. But he just so happened to miss St. John’s best win of the season, at Cincinnati, with an eye injury. And he was around for St. John’s embarrassing home loss to UNC Asheville.
Meanwhile, I feel for Creighton’s Josh Jones having to give up basketball due to a heart condition. But as crazy as it sounds, his 109 ORtg was actually a drag on Creighton’s fine offense. The Blue Jays are in the rare position of having an embarrassment of riches in their rotation right now.
After NCAA tournament hero CJ McCollum went down, I thought Lehigh would have to cede the Patriot league title to Bucknell. But by buckling down on defense, Lehigh won its first five games against D1 competition without McCollum, and shockingly picked up the road victory at Bucknell. They actually looked like they might be the Patriot league favorites after all. But a home loss against Lafayette emphasized what was already true. Without McCollum, Lehigh’s offense isn’t nearly as good. Perhaps by emphasizing their new defensive identity, they can still win the league. But it isn’t going to be nearly as easy without their star.
|
Team
|
Adj Off
|
Adj Def
|
W
|
L
|
Pyth.
|
|
St. Louis
|
105.7
|
90.0
|
8
|
3
|
0.8382
|
|
St. Louis (with Kwamain Mitchell)
|
103.4
|
90.5
|
6
|
2
|
0.7968
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Alabama
|
100.4
|
98.0
|
2
|
5
|
0.5608
|
|
Alabama (with Andrew Steele)
|
106.7
|
87.6
|
9
|
2
|
0.8833
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Syracuse
|
113.1
|
81.0
|
15
|
1
|
0.9684
|
|
Syracuse (without James Southerland)
|
122.7
|
96.1
|
3
|
1
|
0.9240
|
Kwamain Mitchell’s ORtg is only 88.9, and he is one of only two St. Louis players with a sub-100 ORtg. Given how the team played without him, I think it is worth asking whether he is hurting the St. Louis offense.
Andrew Steele can’t be as important as the numbers here show. But his absence corresponded to the team’s December swoon. And I’m certainly willing to believe that the senior guard is an important cog to the team’s offensive and defensive chemistry. I just know that given his limited role on the team, there are other factors at play here.
Finally, Syracuse was playing like the 2nd best team in the nation in the games before the Southerland academic suspension. Since then, the upset loss to Villanova has the Orange playing more like the 15th best team in the nation. Still, that loss to Villanova felt like one of the annual games where an opponent got hot from three. Syracuse usually loses at least one of those. I’m not sure we have an accurate feel for the Orange without Southerland yet.
Final Notes: The following injuries are not worth a split since they were so short, but they will likely show up on NCAA scouting reports at the end of the year.
-Mike Bruesewitz missed Wisconsin's loss to Marquette.
-Justin Jackson missed Cincinnati's loss to Notre Dame. Given Jackson’s general struggles this year, I'm not sure anyone can count that as meaningful, but I'm sure it will show up on the NCAA committees report from the Big East.
-Brady Heslip missed Baylor's loss to Charleston. I watched this game and his absence really seemed to hurt the flow of the Baylor offense.
-Xavier Thames missed San Diego St.'s loss to Wyoming.
-Dwayne Davis missed Southern Miss's loss to Arizona with the flu. It didn’t seem that important at the time, but given how well Southern Miss is playing in CUSA this year, it could matter come selection Sunday.
-Roy Devyn Marble missed Iowa's 3 point loss to Michigan St.
-PJ Hairston missed North Carolina's loss to Indiana.
-Sam Grooms missed Oklahoma's loss to SF Austin.
-Cory Remekun missed St. Louis's loss to Santa Clara.
-Terone Johnson missed Purdue’s loss to Bucknell.
-Rotnei Clarke missed Butler’s loss to La Salle.
-Milton Jennings missed Clemson's loss to Purdue.
-Nate Wolters missed South Dakota St.'s loss to Minnesota.
-Akron was missing Demetrius Treadwell and Nick Harney in their season opening losses to Coastal Carolina and Oklahoma St. The latter came in OT so the NCAA may very well care that these players were missing.
-Stanford was missing Aaron Bright for the Missouri and Minnesota losses, but oddly the team has played worse basketball since he has returned. Perhaps his 23% three point shooting has something to do with that.
-Finally, I'm not going to say much about players who missed the opening game or opening three games (Shabazz Muhammad) because with the recent games weighting on Kenpom.com those games have already been deemphasized. But there remain a number of recent injuries to keep an eye on in February. Oregon's Dominic Artis, UCLA's Travis Wear, Notre Dame's Scott Martin, Boise St.'s Jeff Elorriaga, and Texas's Jonathan Holmes have only recently joined the inactive list. Dec 03, 2012 12:33 PM EST
The game of the weekend featured Baylor ending Kentucky’s 55-game home winning streak. I’ve often described Scott Drew as an excellent recruiter, but without the in-season coaching ability of John Calipari. But for at least one afternoon, Scott Drew’s club ended up on top.
A couple of things fascinated me about the game.
First, John Calipari had Kyle Wiltjer on the bench for a long stretch in the second half. And he really had no choice. Wiltjer finished the day 1-for-11 from the floor, and he doesn’t have the defensive ability to stay in the game if his shot isn’t falling. Wiltjer has to find ways to provide value to his team other than just knocking down threes if he is going to be a true leader this season.
Second, I continued to be impressed with the all-around game of Baylor’s Isaiah Austin. I wish he would settle for a few less outside shots, but what I love about Austin is how he always looks extremely focused when on the floor. Even if he commits a turnover or takes a dumb shot, Austin doesn’t ever appear to get rattled.
Of course it is easy to describe an intangible like “quiet confidence” when a player is winning. And with Kentucky losing, it is easy to attack Nerlens Noel’s complete lack of an offensive game. But had Kentucky rallied to win, we’d instead be talking about all the little things Noel did to help his team win on Saturday. Noel had 16 rebounds and 6 steals in Kentucky’s loss, and Kentucky needed those defensive stops in a game where they shot so poorly. Watching so many freshmen play prominent roles made me want to do a quick update of how all the top recruits have fared this season. Here is a summary of the RSCI Top 80. * = injured or ineligible for part of the season
| |
Player
|
Team
|
PPG
|
Pct Min
|
Pct Poss
|
ORtg
|
DR%
|
Ast%
|
|
1
|
Shabazz Muhammad
|
UCLA
|
16.0
|
42.4*
|
28.0
|
105.2
|
11.1
|
5.9
|
|
2
|
Nerlens Noel
|
Kentucky
|
11.4
|
78.5
|
21.1
|
110.2
|
21.1
|
14.8
|
|
3
|
Kyle Anderson
|
UCLA
|
6.6
|
69.5
|
20.4
|
87.9
|
19.4
|
20.6
|
|
4
|
Isaiah Austin
|
Baylor
|
13.7
|
64.2
|
22.1
|
107.9
|
18.2
|
6.4
|
|
5
|
Steven Adams
|
Pittsburgh
|
6.0
|
48.0
|
17.7
|
110.6
|
14.8
|
3.4
|
|
6
|
Anthony Bennett
|
UNLV
|
18.8
|
66.6
|
25.5
|
130.9
|
13.6
|
9.6
|
|
7
|
Kaleb Tarczewski
|
Arizona
|
6.2
|
51.5
|
17.6
|
109.0
|
25.8
|
6.6
|
|
8
|
Alex Poythress
|
Kentucky
|
15.4
|
73.9
|
22.7
|
114.9
|
13.7
|
3.9
|
|
9
|
Marcus Smart
|
Okl. State
|
14.5
|
85.7
|
28.0
|
103.4
|
16.4
|
35.3
|
|
10
|
Archie Goodwin
|
Kentucky
|
16.4
|
85.7
|
27.3
|
105.0
|
14.0
|
24.2
|
Kentucky has had a problem with rebounding this year, but don’t blame Nerlens Noel. He needs some help from Willie-Cauley Stein and Kyle Wiltjer who are very poor defensive rebounders for their size.
If Kaleb Tarczewski and Steven Adams aren’t earning major minutes at this point in the season, it is hard to envisioning them becoming full scale stars later. When conference play rolls around, coaches tend to be less patient with their freshmen. Thus in many ways, percentage of minutes can be the most important stat this time of year.
Efficiency is also important, and Kyle Anderson’s 87.9 ORtg is terrible for an elite recruit. Point guards can struggle more than other players to adapt to the college game and Anderson was considered to have point guard skills out of high school. So perhaps Anderson’s struggles aren’t a complete surprise. On the other hand, Archie Goodwin and Marcus Smart weren’t really point guards in high school and they have adapted to the position. Goodwin’s turnover numbers are far too high, but he’s set up his teammates passably while setting up his own shot a lot. And Marcus Smart has made a tremendous transition to playing the point-guard position at the college level. Smart’s assist rate is much better than many players regarded as better passers out of high school.
I really think the problem with Anderson is that Ben Howland hasn’t figured out how to use him. Lots of coaches from Rick Pitino to John Thompson III have been able to feature great lanky passers, by positioning them at the high post and letting them see the whole floor. Anderson still has the potential to be that type of player, even if he has struggled early.
| |
Player
|
Team
|
PPG
|
Pct Min
|
Pct Poss
|
ORtg
|
DR%
|
Ast%
|
|
11
|
Grant Jerrett
|
Arizona
|
6.6
|
47.0
|
16.2
|
126.9
|
17.2
|
9.2
|
|
12
|
Rasheed Sulaimon
|
Duke
|
12.9
|
80.0
|
20.1
|
108.2
|
10.5
|
13.4
|
|
13
|
Ricardo Ledo
|
Providence
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
|
|
14
|
Cameron Ridley
|
Texas
|
5.1
|
44.2
|
22.3
|
72.9
|
17.1
|
0
|
|
15
|
Brandon Ashley
|
Arizona
|
11.0
|
56.5
|
22.8
|
122.5
|
25.5
|
6.3
|
|
16
|
Gary Harris
|
Mich. St.
|
11.8
|
44.6*
|
21.7
|
116.1
|
7.0
|
3.1
|
|
17
|
Rodney Purvis
|
NC State
|
10.0
|
73.3
|
17.3
|
106.8
|
5.8
|
9.1
|
|
18
|
DaJuan Coleman
|
Syracuse
|
5.8
|
37.0
|
24.1
|
85.4
|
25.4
|
2.3
|
|
19
|
Sam Dekker
|
Wisconsin
|
10.5
|
51.2
|
23.1
|
125.6
|
5.9
|
16.4
|
|
20
|
Kris Dunn
|
Providence
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
|
Grant Jerrett and Sam Dekker are the only players in the Top 20 who are not starting. Ricardo Ledo is ineligible. And Kris Dunn and Gary Harris are injured.
We start to see the typical drop-off when we get to recruits in the 11-20 range. DaJuan Coleman still has the profile of a player who will be a star in a future season, but right now he is having trouble earning playing time behind other quality big men on Syracuse’s roster. Meanwhile Cameron Ridley has been extremely disappointing for Texas. Certainly it hurts not to have Myck Kabongo eligible, but Kabongo’s absence doesn’t explain why a player like Ridley can be so passive against a team like Chaminade as he was in the Maui Invitational loss. The only good thing I can say about Ridley is that he has 19 blocks already, which is more than any other player in the Top 50 except Nerlens Noel.
Only Rasheed Sulaimon has become an undisputed crunch time star for his team. And Sulaimon’s efficiency is even more impressive when you look at Duke’s strength of schedule so far. Rodney Purvis has also played major minutes, but he is deferring a lot to his teammates at this point.
| |
Player
|
Team
|
PPG
|
Pct Min
|
Pct Poss
|
ORtg
|
DR%
|
Ast%
|
|
21
|
Amile Jefferson
|
Duke
|
2.9
|
21.8
|
18.0
|
109.7
|
8.5
|
5.3
|
|
22
|
Devonte Pollard
|
Alabama
|
5.0
|
56.7
|
17.2
|
86.0
|
10.3
|
7.9
|
|
23
|
Glenn Robinson III
|
Michigan
|
12.3
|
79.2
|
18.6
|
131.3
|
14.8
|
7.5
|
|
24
|
Tony Parker
|
UCLA
|
3.3
|
13.2
|
18.5
|
117.1
|
13.7
|
4.6
|
|
25
|
Kevin "Yogi" Ferrell
|
Indiana
|
5.6
|
60.6
|
18.1
|
106.9
|
9.8
|
28.6
|
|
26
|
Mitch McGary
|
Michigan
|
5.0
|
35.7
|
20.3
|
117.4
|
26.4
|
3.4
|
|
27
|
T.J. Warren
|
NC State
|
15.3
|
69.5
|
19.6
|
132.4
|
8.5
|
3.5
|
|
28
|
Marcus Paige
|
North Carolina
|
7.9
|
61.7
|
20.2
|
87.7
|
7.8
|
19.6
|
|
29
|
Danuel House
|
Houston
|
11.3
|
54.6
|
26.4
|
100.8
|
12.6
|
8.1
|
|
30
|
Robert Carter
|
Georgia Tech
|
7.8
|
60.8
|
21.2
|
95.2
|
19.2
|
7.3
|
Glenn Robinson has been shockingly efficient at this point in the season, well above many of his peers on this list. But none of the players listed here are going to quite be in the national player of the year discussion because they are starting to become more passive offensive players. (I.e. the percentage of possessions used is now often below 20%) Only Danuel House is using a large number of possessions at this point in the rankings, and House plays for a Houston team that is in the process of upgrading its talent level in anticipation of joining the Big East.
This preseason I wrote how Marcus Paige would have some growing pains and be inconsistent this year, and the response I got was that Roy Williams had a ton of confidence in Paige and that I was being un-necessarily pessimistic. So far, with an 87.7 ORtg, neither Paige nor the Tar Heels are off to a great start. Paige has better days ahead, but North Carolina is also going to have a few more baffling losses before the season is over.
I was worried that Yogi Ferrell could have a similar negative impact on the Hoosiers because freshmen are often inconsistent. But Ferrell has thrived because he has worked within the offense. Instead of hogging the ball and needing to create shots, Ferrell has let his teammates work their isolation stuff, and provided key drives and dishes when needed. Ferrell has been happy to fill a role on the Hoosiers, and he has been everything Indiana needed.
Finally, Tony Parker’s minutes this year have been a joke, but with Josh Smith transferring, Parker at least has a chance of cracking the UCLA rotation now.
| |
Player
|
Team
|
PPG
|
Pct Min
|
Pct Poss
|
ORtg
|
DR%
|
Ast%
|
|
31
|
Perry Ellis
|
Kansas
|
6.4
|
40.0
|
20.8
|
115.6
|
14.6
|
8.8
|
|
32
|
Ricardo Gathers
|
Baylor
|
5.6
|
41.0
|
20.0
|
101.5
|
15.5
|
1.5
|
|
33
|
Winston Shepard
|
San Diego State
|
3.7
|
24.1
|
24.2
|
49.2
|
10.1
|
6.3
|
|
34
|
Shaquille Cleare
|
Maryland
|
5.3
|
31.7
|
16.6
|
129.0
|
6.3
|
0
|
|
35
|
Shaq Goodwin
|
Memphis
|
7.5
|
50.0
|
21.7
|
109.4
|
16.5
|
9
|
|
36
|
Katin Reinhardt
|
UNLV
|
11.3
|
73.3
|
16.7
|
116.5
|
5.1
|
20
|
|
37
|
D. Smith-Rivera
|
Georgetown
|
5.8
|
44.0
|
15.6
|
108.8
|
4.2
|
5.5
|
|
38
|
Willie Cauley
|
Kentucky
|
7.4
|
48.2
|
20.2
|
103.5
|
14.8
|
7
|
|
39
|
Omar Calhoun
|
Connecticut
|
10.9
|
75.8
|
19.8
|
103.9
|
8.8
|
8.4
|
|
40
|
Brice Johnson
|
North Carolina
|
9.1
|
35.0
|
22.1
|
119.9
|
24.3
|
3.4
|
|
41
|
Jerami Grant
|
Syracuse
|
2.0
|
22.0
|
9.8
|
119.2
|
11.2
|
7.1
|
|
42
|
Adam Woodbury
|
Iowa
|
6.6
|
42.8
|
18.1
|
118.5
|
17.6
|
6.5
|
|
43
|
Tyler Lewis
|
NC State
|
2.7
|
36.2
|
16.9
|
83.6
|
10.6
|
20
|
|
44
|
Jeremy Hollowell
|
Indiana
|
6.4
|
35.3
|
26.1
|
92.7
|
12.4
|
1.5
|
|
45
|
Daniel Ochefu
|
Villanova
|
3.1
|
35.1
|
14.0
|
83.3
|
21.9
|
2.2
|
|
46
|
Cam Biedscheid
|
Notre Dame
|
8.0
|
42.4
|
21.9
|
113.7
|
9.1
|
16.1
|
|
47
|
Gabe York
|
Arizona
|
3.0
|
18.0
|
16.2
|
147.3
|
6.4
|
26.2
|
|
48
|
Justin Anderson
|
Virginia
|
6.1
|
52.8
|
21.8
|
100.8
|
9.8
|
23.2
|
|
49
|
Semaj Christon
|
Xavier
|
16.0
|
73.2
|
29.6
|
111.7
|
9.3
|
37.8
|
|
50
|
Hanner Perea
|
Indiana
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
|
Notice how often a lack of playing time plagues players at this point in the rankings. I expected and still expect big things out of Kansas’ Perry Ellis and Iowa’s Adam Woodbury, but their coaches have only given them a taste of playing time at this point. The result is that some guys at this point in the rankings become unmitigated gunners. Hey Indiana’s Jeremy Hollowell, no matter how good you think you are, when the game with North Carolina was close late in the first half, Indiana didn’t want you bombing threes. They wanted Jordan Hulls bombing threes.
Xavier has played much better than many of us anticipated this season, and freshman Semaj Christon deserves a lot of that credit. Christon has out-played point-guards like Marcus Paige and realistically he’s been much more important than even Yogi Ferrell given his role in the offense. Christon is using nearly 30% of his team’s possessions, scoring at a prolific clip, and setting up his teammates without a rash of turnovers.
| |
Player
|
Team
|
PPG
|
Pct Min
|
Pct Poss
|
ORtg
|
DR%
|
Ast%
|
|
51
|
Josh Scott
|
Colorado
|
13.1
|
68.6
|
22.8
|
118.3
|
11.4
|
3.3
|
|
52
|
Andrew White
|
Kansas
|
2.6
|
11.0
|
22.6
|
101.3
|
26.4
|
5.8
|
|
53
|
Robert Upshaw
|
Fresno State
|
4.7
|
17.5
|
24.8
|
80.4
|
20.1
|
7.5
|
|
54
|
Braxton Ogbueze
|
Florida
|
1.7
|
20.0
|
17.2
|
70.7
|
18.6
|
3.8
|
|
55
|
Ryan Arcidiacono
|
Villanova
|
12.9
|
84.8
|
23.1
|
95.8
|
10.5
|
28.2
|
|
56
|
Dominic Artis
|
Oregon
|
10.2
|
64.6
|
21.8
|
100.9
|
9.1
|
23.4
|
|
57
|
J.P. Tokoto
|
North Carolina
|
3.4
|
24.3
|
20.9
|
89.6
|
12.4
|
9.5
|
|
58
|
Joel James
|
North Carolina
|
4.0
|
40.3
|
12.6
|
111.1
|
18.0
|
4.2
|
|
59
|
Jordan Adams
|
UCLA
|
17.8
|
62.4
|
26.1
|
123.0
|
12.0
|
8.3
|
|
60
|
Montay Brandon
|
Florida State
|
6.0
|
58.2
|
17.1
|
93.5
|
9.2
|
15.5
|
|
61
|
Elijah Macon
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
|
|
62
|
Prince Ibeh
|
Texas
|
1.6
|
30.8
|
12.0
|
63.9
|
14.9
|
2.3
|
|
63
|
James Robinson
|
Pittsburgh
|
7.2
|
74.4
|
14.4
|
120.6
|
9.0
|
21
|
|
64
|
Danrad Knowles
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
|
|
65
|
J-Mychal Reese
|
Texas A&M
|
6.6
|
74.6
|
17.7
|
89.1
|
9.5
|
18.5
|
|
66
|
L.J. Rose
|
Baylor
|
1.0
|
18.2
|
19.2
|
54.5
|
7.8
|
14.9
|
|
67
|
Xavier Johnson
|
Colorado
|
6.9
|
48.2
|
20.2
|
94.4
|
14.0
|
4.5
|
|
68
|
Jake Layman
|
Maryland
|
2.0
|
33.9
|
13.7
|
72.8
|
10.9
|
10.2
|
|
69
|
Christopher Obekpa
|
St. John's
|
4.6
|
59.3
|
13.7
|
96.9
|
11.1
|
9.3
|
|
70
|
Jordan Price
|
Auburn
|
5.3
|
38.9
|
21.9
|
84.6
|
5.4
|
14.2
|
|
71
|
Georges Niang
|
Iowa State
|
10.1
|
52.1
|
19.9
|
126.4
|
15.8
|
15.4
|
|
72
|
Torian Graham
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
|
|
73
|
Rosco Allen
|
Stanford
|
3.1
|
21.6
|
23.7
|
79.5
|
18.7
|
7.9
|
|
74
|
Evan Nolte
|
Virginia
|
6.4
|
48.1
|
15.3
|
115.6
|
8.4
|
16.2
|
|
75
|
A.J. Hammons
|
Purdue
|
8.6
|
47.7
|
23.8
|
102.2
|
19.4
|
8.2
|
|
76
|
Codi Miller-McIntyre
|
Wake Forest
|
9.0
|
75.0
|
16.5
|
103.9
|
7.5
|
17.3
|
|
77
|
Terry Rozier
|
|
|
*
|
|
|
|
|
|
78
|
Nik Stauskas
|
Michigan
|
14.3
|
69.2
|
15.9
|
158.3
|
11.9
|
3.5
|
|
79
|
Jakarr Sampson
|
St. John's
|
12.5
|
75.3
|
22.2
|
105.4
|
16.7
|
8.5
|
|
80
|
Javan Felix
|
Texas
|
7.1
|
84.9
|
20.6
|
82.7
|
10.0
|
39.6
|
Most of Christopher Opekpa’s stats are pretty pedestrian, but not his block rate. Opekpa has 35 blocks at this point in the season, easily out-distancing any of the other freshmen in today’s column.
Nik Stauskas has been unbelievably efficient at this point and he is playing major minutes to boot. Some people expected Michigan to be a Top 10 team, but did they really expect Stauskas to outperform his peer level players by this much? His efficiency is due in large part to his teammates, and his shot-selection. But his performance is still notable. Stauskas has the most threes of anyone mentioned in this column (18 made) beating even UCLA’s super-aggressive shooter Jordan Adams.
Also give Adams credit. He’s shooting 26% of the time while maintaining a solid ORtg. Kyle Anderson may have been the third rated recruit for UCLA, but Adams has actually played like one.
Nerlens Noel, Isaiah Austin, Shabazz Muhammad, Rasheed Sulaimon, Kyle Anderson, Brandon Ashley, Alex Poythress, Archie Goodwin, Marcus Smart, Anthony Bennett, Kaleb Tarczewski, Kentucky Wildcats, Baylor Bears, UCLA Bruins, Pittsburgh Panthers, Arizona Wildcats, UNLV Runnin' Rebels, Oklahoma State Cowboys, Duke Blue Devils, Michigan State Spartans, Texas Longhorns, North Carolina State Wolfpack, Syracuse Orange, Wisconsin Badgers, Providence Friars, Alabama Crimson Tide, Michigan Wolverines, Indiana Hoosiers, North Carolina Tar Heels, Houston Cougars, Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, Kansas Jayhawks, San Diego State Aztecs, Maryland Terrapins, Memphis Tigers, Georgetown Hoyas, Connecticut Huskies, Iowa Hawkeyes, Villanova Wildcats, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, Xavier Musketeers, Colorado Buffaloes, Fresno State Bulldogs, Florida Gators, Oregon Ducks, Florida State Seminoles, Texas A&M Aggies, St. John's Red Storm, Auburn Tigers, Iowa State Cyclones, Stanford Cardinal, Purdue Boilermakers, Virginia Cavaliers, Wake Forest Demon Deacons, NCAA Oct 08, 2012 The Legends Classic might be the most highly anticipated early season tournament because of the potential finals matchup between Indiana and UCLA. We also look at the CBE Classic, Maui Invitational, Cancun Challenge, Great Alaska Shootout, Battle 4 Atlantis and the Old Spice Classic. Aug 22, 2012 Nothing in college basketball is guaranteed, as evidenced by LeBryan Nash, Cameron Clark, Doneal Mack and Malcolm Grant. May 15, 2012 In a surprise announcement, VCU is headed to the A10 for the upcoming season. Where do I project the Rams to finish? Mar 17, 2012 A running diary of a historic day in the NCAA tournament. Mar 12, 2012 Which teams have the best and worst performance against other NCAA tournament teams? And which teams have the best and worst performance in the last 10 games? Mar 12, 2012 A few preliminary thoughts on matchups and which teams will advance deep in the tournament. Mar 09, 2012 While personnel determine scheme in the NBA, college basketball coaches recruit players that fit their schemes. Feb 13, 2012 Thomas Robinson, J'Covan Brown, Meyers Leonard, Jamaal Franklin and Trae Golden are amongst the Top-20 Breakout Players in college basketball. Dec 27, 2011 Here is how various college teams such as Ohio State, Baylor, Pitt and Oregon have performed with and without key players. Dec 26, 2011 Duke, Kentucky, UCLA, Texas, Kansas, North Carolina, UConn, Florida and Arizona each begin the 11-12 NBA season with 10 or more players on NBA rosters. Nov 05, 2011 Don't wait until March to start printing out college basketball brackets. With the Preseason NIT, Maui Invitational, Puerto Rico Tipoff and other excellent tournaments, you can start the madness in November. Oct 27, 2011 On why the revelations of Michael Beasley getting money in college are so unsurprising and why no one, not the NCAA, the NBA, the fans or the players, really cares about it. Oct 10, 2011 The Big Ten sent seven teams to the Big Dance, while a familiar face at UAB continues to excel in Conference-USA. What will these two conferences look like in 11-12? Sep 28, 2011 Butler and George Mason have proven it is possible to reach the Final Four without Top-100 recruits, but Florida's success without Top-10 players in 2006 and 2007 may give us the most realistic scenario of success. Mar 14, 2011 The field of 68 has been set and the four No. 1 seeds boringly look like good bets to reach the Final Four, but here are a few teams capable of overachieving. Jan 23, 2011 Conference USA alums have won the past two NBA Rookie of the Year awards. Jan 18, 2011 Teams that recruit well, recruit McDonald's All-Americans. Over the past four years, where have those players gone to school? Older Articles » |
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