I think the difference is we usually have guards capable of providing a spark off the bench:
2021 - Ayo, Curbelo, Miller, Trent
2022 - Curbelo, Trent, Plummer
2023 - Skyy, Harris, Epps
2024 - DGL, Harmon
(just listing all the guards - somebody played off the bench and provided a spark on each team)
Past year it was no one. And coming year it’ll likely be no one as well.
The Wisconsin game was brutal. Keaton the only ball handler; only played 6 guys. This year will be the same thing in a similar scenario.
It’s just not ideal to have guard depth as a weakness for two seasons in a row. Especially when it’s easily avoidable.
So now we're at the point where we are griping about the season that just ended with us getting to a Final Four?
Your main bone to pick has been that we do not have reliable, veteran guards to rely on and would have to rely on unproven freshmen like Morillo and Brown to provide a spark of the bench, right?
In 2024, DGL was a freshman. He also wasn't very good. He played 7 mpg, shot 34% from the field and 22% from 3. Not much spark there.
In 2023, Skyy, Harris, and Epps were all freshmen.
In 2022, Curbelo had a notoriously disappointing sophomore seasons.
In 2021, Curbelo and Miller were freshmen (and Miller started).
So it was ok to rely on Freshmen in prior years, but not ok now?
Plus a lot of the people you listed were starters, which I get that you're just trying to show the "depth" but kinda misleading with all this talk of a "bench spark." If you take all the freshmen out, and all the starters out, here is what your list looks like:
2024: Harmon
2022: Curbelo
That's it. That's the whole list.