concernedparent said:
BearlyCareAnymore said:
TonyTiger said:
BearlyCareAnymore said:
stu said:
Calfan92 said:
Freshies.
OK, thanks. We have only two and I don't know if Mitrovic has signed yet.
Anyway I don't think our freshies will matter right away since our transfer class looks much stronger. On paper.
Should I even use the term "class" when I expect most of them won't stay more than a year?
No.
Honestly, I no longer look more than a year out because we haven't kept a single player who had a truly successful year, so I think what they might develop into is kind of irrelevant.
Again, I apologize if I'm coming off too positive in a negative thread, but look at the resultsevery one of those guys who left was developed well. From Tyson going in the first round to Scottie Pippen landing a $3 million deal to play against Michigan at Ohio State, they all moved on to better opportunities.
Mark Madsen may not be able to sell team chemistry or NCAA tournament appearances right now, but he can sell player developmentand when players develop, they take the next step. That's a positive outcome, not a negative one.
2. It is blatantly untrue that they all got better and moved on to better things. You guys keep saying Tyson, Tyson, Tyson because no one else from that team did jack. There are a whole lot more guys who regressed or did the same and some of the guys you guys credit looked about the same at the end of the year as the beginning. They just got a bigger opportunity here. There is nothing magic here.
I generally agree with your posts but not this. It's not just a bigger opportunity. Players get bigger opportunities and face plant all the time. Just look at the 2 previous regimes where there were plenty of minutes and shots to go around. Matt Bradley is literally the only example of a player that improved enough to become a significant contributor to a competitive team. Ames' efficiency stats may look the same but the jump in volume is indicative of a major improvement. Do you think Rudy Gobert or any low-volume, high-efficiency player maintains that efficiency if they got 10 more shots a game? No, almost always efficiency goes down as their shots get more difficult due to defensive game planning or the pressure of carrying the load.
It's not just Tyson. Stojakovic did nothing at Stanford. Pippen did nothing at Michigan. Ames, role player at Virginia. Camden, good mid-major player. Sissoko, role player at Michigan State. Dort did nothing at Vanderbilt. Wilkinson, 3 star with mostly mid major offers. They come to Cal and all of them (Dort excepted) become big-time contributors that either moved onto a bigger paycheck at a big-time program, or if they had another year of eligibility, would've gotten a bigger paycheck.
There's just too many examples for it to be a coincidence. Madsen is either excellent at talent development, or excellent at talent scouting plus having a system that allows players to shine. Either way, players are way more productive here than they were before. It sucks that in the portal/NIL age this attribute isn't as indicative of team success, but it's not nothing.
First of all, let me be clear because I think I may have implied that Madsen is a poor developer of talent and that is not what I meant. I think he is fine. I don't think anything special is going on here and that has been implied over and over on this board. Or, frankly, stated as a foregone conclusion.
Second of all, I absolutely disagree with using the 2 previous regimes as a measuring stick. They were the worst of the worst. Absolute zero percentile. (though I disagree with not including Sueing with Bradley)
But the overall point is that on every non-defective team some guys develop and some don't. Most guys get somewhat better with experience. Some young players getting their first opportunity take advantage of it. Some prospects are better than their ranking. Some aren't as good. Many guys get a year under their belts and really improve.
As for the guys you mentioned.
Guys who undoubtedly took steps:
Tyson undoubtedly took a huge step in his year at Cal
Sissoko - if you read about him at MSU, they loved the guy. Clearly the guy was a hard worker who did whatever was asked and you expected him to do really well holding down the defense and pulling down boards. However, he developed an offensive game here that might not have been earth shattering, but was light years ahead of anything he had done previously. Big kudos to the staff.
Dort - He was wasted space. I don't think he is what I would call good, but he is a solid starter.
Guys who got an opportunity:
Pippen - To say Pippen did nothing is true, but misleading. He was a highly rated recruit who was a true freshman on the Big 10 champion team that went to the Sweet Sixteen. He "did nothing" because their roster was loaded. His game logs for us are pretty consistent throughout the season indicating he was pretty good at the start of the season. I'm not saying no credit goes to the staff because they contributed, but out of a group of prospects that come in, some of them are good when they get their first opportunity.
Wilkinson - he had 3 SEC offers, but yes, he was a three star recruit. I've seen three star recruits walk in and be good all the time. He was pretty good as soon as he got minutes for us. He has improved at Georgia including a substantial improvement in 3 point shooting. I think both staffs deserve credit, but I'm going to also say this guy is just plain and simple a good player
Guys who are who we thought they were:
Dai Dai Ames - Ames had an injury during the season at Virginia. When he recovered fully he scored 14.8 pts a game in his last 10. His totals went up this year because he was healthy and our best offensive player. But they weren't up that much beyond his last 10 games there and his shooting percentages were basically the same (negligibly down).
Camden - Not sure where you are going with that. His numbers are down a little bit across the board. Shooting %, 3pt%, EFG%, Assists, Rebounds, Points. Pretty much exactly as I would expect going from mid major to ACC. Good player. Had a good year. Same as last year.
Guy who, no, just no. I don't acknowledge that he is a quality player that counts here:
Andrej Stojakovic - Okay, he's not a bear anymore, so I will speak freely. Nothing personal - he may be a great guy. As a player, I hate that guy. Selfish nepo baby, who is a terrible 3 point shooter, who does not make guys around him better and consistently does less with more. He was a frosh at Stanford and got more usage at Cal because we were inept at shooting and scoring. I didn't want him to leave because I didn't know who would replace him, but I'm glad he did because I believe our team would have been worse with him.
Beyond that, what about players, of varying quality, who did not make big leaps:
Omot, Blacksher, Mahoney, Campbell, Pavlovic, Petraitis, Tucker, Curtis, Aimaq, Cone, Askew, Kennedy, Newell, Brown, Okafor, Bowser, Dorsey,
As I said, some guys do great, others don't. This is not a poor hit rate. This is not an awesome hit rate. We've basically had 1 or 2 guys a year take a step up and then they immediately leave. We've had a bunch of guys, as you'd expect not do much, and some guys keep on keepin on.