Just pointing out that use of money to construct the roster was not the good imo. Btw I said that when he was constructing this roster and I was not a fan of many of the players that they were targeting. Luckily for us that Keaton Wagler turned out to be as good as he was or else this team would have been in a world of hurt. Btw BU was planning on Wagler getting 5-10 minutes a game until he was on campus so he was a definite welcome surprise that saved this team by covering up lots of flaws.
You make great points and the one about Keaton isn't discussed enough. This year has proven how absolutely fragile it is to put a team together that meshes, then keep it on track.
I look at Wagler. He was fantastic when the season started and was a perfect match with Boswell.
Boswell went down and Keaton absolutely exploded onto the national scene and became a projected lottery pick. We were rolling.
Kylan came back and it seems as though our backcourt really isn't operating the same. We are clearly a better team when both Boswell and Keaton are in the floor together, but it does seem like there's indecision on Keaton's part right now. He was clearly to go to guy. When Boz came back, it looks like Keaton isn't sure whether to defer, when to attack. The chemistry looks a little funky, right?
To go along with that and to your overall point, which Emerald touched on, with the rise of Wagler, I think there was a demise to Drej. I think that it was initially thought that Drej was going to be getting the bulk of the touches. Being a secondary, even tertiary open hasn't sat well. Coming off the bench was not what he was envisioning and I think that's had a major, major effect.
I might even put Tomi in that category. The offense was supposed to run through the post with Tomi being a Swiss army knife. He could play with his back to the basket and finish, he could pass out of the post and be a distributor and he could shoot the three. That was his role and last year, he was REALLY good.
With the rise of Keaton came a LOT more iso ball. We can't complain about the outcome because the guy was close to dropping 50 on Purdue, had 30+ in others....he was dominant.
This is way too long winded, so apologies. The gist is, there's only one ball. Everyone foresaw their role, loved it and they signed to play here. When you don't play together for a couple of years, the smallest turn of the screw can alter what you had or your intentions. Without time for significant chemistry, it's tough to retain consistency or meet expectations.