GoRamblers wrote:
I can see him starting and getting relieved by Julius. In my head, I see this depth chart:
1: Keke/Richardson
2: Milt/Earl
3: Swaggy T/Ingram/Knuth
4: Montel/Adgei
5: Kirby/Julius
Who am I missing (not walk on)?
This assumes that we're going back to a more traditional lineup, with more defined and discrete roles for point guard, shooting guard, power forward, etc. I think the key to our success this year was the versatility of each player, both on offense and defense. It allowed guys to not get trapped or steered into spots where they couldn't perform, and contributed to the active switching and help defense. Both on offense and defense, Loyola had players who were able to easily switch above or below their natural number on the floor to get the job done when needed. The whole scheme of how we won 24 games was really a stroke of genius on the part of the coach (granted, it was perhaps borne out of necessity), and fantastic buy-in by the players. It made us a really tough team to scout and game plan against.
Of the 11 players who saw an average of five minutes or more per game: only one didn't hit a three pointer (James, on zero attempts); we had nine players with more than 20 assists (only Knuth and Rajala had less); nine players had double digit steals; eight players had five or more blocks (surprisingly, Peterson only had four); four players had more than 100 rebounds (and two others had between 80-100). Five (!) guys had 49 or more assists with a better than 1.0 assist to turnover ratio. Our WORST three point shooter hit on 29% of them, and four guys had double-digit made threes while averaging over 40%.