Yes, they watched the hypothetical one.Big Ten with 2 teams in top 10, 6 in top 25.
SEC with 3 teams in top 10, 7 in top 25.
Did ESPN watch a different college basketball season than the rest of us last year?
Yes, they watched the hypothetical one.Big Ten with 2 teams in top 10, 6 in top 25.
SEC with 3 teams in top 10, 7 in top 25.
Did ESPN watch a different college basketball season than the rest of us last year?
anyone else think Carey Booth would've had a solid 8-10min role on this team? there's room for an athletic forward in a small role.Unfiltered thoughts after watching QC for Team America:
It's been years since I've felt worse about our depth (and the 9th man) going into the season - fear being they'll be totally unplayable and we won't have an option at all after the top 8.
It's also been years since I've felt this good about our starting 5.
I'll choose to believe the latter wins out.
I think there was a similar role available when Booth was here and he still couldn’t earn itanyone else think Carey Booth would've had a solid 8-10min role on this team? there's room for an athletic forward in a small role.
in 2025, jake davis was the ideal #9thMan, so Booth got buried. No reason to dislike the young man.
Brad said Booth was lost on the court and his teammates recognized it to the point where one brought it up to him. We’re scraping the bottom of the barrel if we’re longing for him as the #9thman.anyone else think Carey Booth would've had a solid 8-10min role on this team? there's room for an athletic forward in a small role.
in 2025, jake davis was the ideal #9thMan, so Booth got buried. No reason to dislike the young man.
Where are these magical 9th men?Unfiltered thoughts after watching QC for Team America:
It's been years since I've felt worse about our depth (and the 9th man) going into the season - fear being they'll be totally unplayable and we won't have an option at all after the top 8.
It's also been years since I've felt this good about our starting 5.
I'll choose to believe the latter wins out.
Is it because the former is an absolutely insane position?Unfiltered thoughts after watching QC for Team America:
It's been years since I've felt worse about our depth (and the 9th man) going into the season - fear being they'll be totally unplayable and we won't have an option at all after the top 8.
It's also been years since I've felt this good about our starting 5.
I'll choose to believe the latter wins out.
I think an athletic forward would be a good final addition, personally. A guy with a similar body and playing style as Booth.anyone else think Carey Booth would've had a solid 8-10min role on this team? there's room for an athletic forward in a small role.
in 2025, jake davis was the ideal #9thMan, so Booth got buried. No reason to dislike the young man.
Where are these magical 9th men?
Here's my explanation:Who are these storied 9th men that you felt so good about?
It wasn't much of an opinion about the #9thMan discourse. Just the possibility of whether he could earn a role on the team.Brad said Booth was lost on the court and his teammates recognized it to the point where one brought it up to him. We’re scraping the bottom of the barrel if we’re longing for him as the #9thman.
Very cool seeing Mirk #1…but didn’t he already break out as a freshmen? I think his ppg will go up just due to more minutes, but he was straight up dominant at times.
Agreed. I don't think Mirk will need to change his game much. He was awesome last year, and even with marginal improvement, will be one of the best players in the B1G. He kind of flew under the radar because of the rapid ascension of Wagler from "project" recruit to All-American.100%. He was a dominant player playing next to a consensus lottery guard with 'the kid who was passed over' story.
I'm not expecting better efficiency from Mirk or any kind of break out. Just be Mirk and let the rest of the team settle in. We have all the pieces, and having the FF experience means these guys will have a better sense of how to tackle the tournament when the lights are brightest.
Unfiltered thoughts after watching QC for Team America:
It's been years since I've felt worse about our depth (and the 9th man) going into the season - fear being they'll be totally unplayable and we won't have an option at all after the top 8.
It's also been years since I've felt this good about our starting 5.
I'll choose to believe the latter wins out.
Just as a point of comparison, Freshman Coleman Hawkins, who was absolutely a serviceable 9th man on a very good Illini team, did not meet this standard. 25 games played, 13 made 3s. The following year, Luke Goode, noted 3pt shooter, was 8th man in minutes played and while he did get into 28 games, only made 16 3s. The year after that our 8th man made 0 3s (Ty Rogers) and our 9th man made 13 (Sencire Harris). And in our Elite Eight year our 9th man, DGL, made 8 3s.Here's my explanation:
Looking at our seasons stats, our 9th men are serviceable enough to play in 70% of team games, at minimum. (last season was an exception, which speaks more to the Petro misfit rather than it being the norm)
So, I'd like the same for next year as well.
Like I said last thread, my benchmark for Zens (assuming he takes that role) would be around 28 games played and 18 made threes.
28 games would mean 70%; and 18 threes would mean he's a threat shooting the ball. Is that a realistic possibility? That's where my concerns lie.
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Additional way to think about it would be:
if/when you lose two of your top-eight to injury for a game, do you play 6 guys or can you stretch it out to 7? That itself plays a significant part between a win and a loss.
LOL no.anyone else think Carey Booth would've had a solid 8-10min role on this team? there's room for an athletic forward in a small role.
in 2025, jake davis was the ideal #9thMan, so Booth got buried. No reason to dislike the young man.
Well, you're missing the point as it pretains to games played.Just as a point of comparison, Freshman Coleman Hawkins, who was absolutely a serviceable 9th man on a very good Illini team, did not meet this standard. 25 games played, 13 made 3s. The following year, Luke Goode, noted 3pt shooter, was 8th man in minutes played and while he did get into 28 games, only made 16 3s. The year after that our 8th man made 0 3s (Ty Rogers) and our 9th man made 13 (Sencire Harris). And in our Elite Eight year our 9th man, DGL, made 8 3s.
So yeah, probably not realistic since the only 9th man we've had in years to do it has been Jake.
You either just started watching Illinois basketball or have some wild anxiety block here.Here's my explanation:
Looking at our seasons stats, our 9th men are serviceable enough to play in 70% of team games, at minimum. (last season was an exception, which speaks more to the Petro misfit rather than it being the norm)
So, I'd like the same for next year as well.
Like I said last thread, my benchmark for Zens (assuming he takes that role) would be around 28 games played and 18 made threes.
28 games would mean 70%; and 18 threes would mean he's a threat shooting the ball. Is that a realistic possibility? That's where my concerns lie.
---
Additional way to think about it would be:
if/when you lose two of your top-eight to injury for a game, do you play 6 guys or can you stretch it out to 7? That itself plays a significant part between a win and a loss.
The thing to consider with Booth is would he play over Zens?LOL no.
I do think this POINT is valid.Well, you're missing the point as it pretains to games played.
That's the biggest determinor of whether the player is getting onto the court. (the 3s comment was more so referring to skill set)
2021 Coleman Hawkins played in 25/31 games as the 9th man. That's 81%.
2022 Luke Goode played in 28/33 games. That's 85%.
2023 Ty Rodgers played in 33/33 games. That's 100%.
2024 DGL played in 28/38 games. That's 74%.
2025 Jake played in 32/35 games. That's 91%.
All of those guys, had the team had two of the top-eight injured, would've the coaches trust to get onto the court. Or if someone just wasn't playing well and we needed a change.
2026 Petrovic was the one exception: 19/37 games. 51%. That's likely a situation you'd like to avoid, rather than think it's a normality.
Therefore, I don't think it's crazy to say we need a playable 9th man. The idea that we always play 8 is pretty propaganda.
My challenge would be, if our 9th man is always playable (with the exception of MP) then why would the expectation be that our 9th man this year isn't playable? Wouldn't past experience tell us that, according to your games played criteria, the staff actually has a 9th man on the roster they're confident in?Well, you're missing the point as it pretains to games played.
That's the biggest determinor of whether the player is getting onto the court. (the 3s comment was more so referring to skill set)
2021 Coleman Hawkins played in 25/31 games as the 9th man. That's 81%.
2022 Luke Goode played in 28/33 games. That's 85%.
2023 Ty Rodgers played in 33/33 games. That's 100%.
2024 DGL played in 28/38 games. That's 74%.
2025 Jake played in 32/35 games. That's 91%.
All of those guys, had the team had two of the top-eight injured, would've the coaches trust to get onto the court. Or if someone just wasn't playing well and we needed a change.
2026 Petrovic was the one exception: 19/37 games. 51%. That's likely a situation you'd like to avoid, rather than think it's a normality.
Therefore, I don't think it's crazy to say we need a playable 9th man. The idea that we always play 8 is pretty propaganda.
And all of those guys, except for Jake, were freshman ranked at or below ZZ’s level, so coming back to your original point:Well, you're missing the point as it pretains to games played.
That's the biggest determinor of whether the player is getting onto the court. (the 3s comment was more so referring to skill set)
2021 Coleman Hawkins played in 25/31 games as the 9th man. That's 81%.
2022 Luke Goode played in 28/33 games. That's 85%.
2023 Ty Rodgers played in 33/33 games. That's 100%.
2024 DGL played in 28/38 games. That's 74%.
2025 Jake played in 32/35 games. That's 91%.
All of those guys, had the team had two of the top-eight injured, would've the coaches trust to get onto the court. Or if someone just wasn't playing well and we needed a change.
2026 Petrovic was the one exception: 19/37 games. 51%. That's likely a situation you'd like to avoid, rather than think it's a normality.
Therefore, I don't think it's crazy to say we need a playable 9th man. The idea that we always play 8 is pretty propaganda.