Posted by Mr_Kid on 3/24/2016 3:14:00 PM (view original):
Posted by grimacedance on 3/24/2016 3:00:00 PM (view original):
Posted by Mr_Kid on 3/24/2016 2:39:00 PM (view original):
Posted by grimacedance on 3/24/2016 2:30:00 PM (view original):
For a motion offense, Nichols & Leedy passer ratings are too low. Passing is the most important attribute in your guards (esp. PG) in a motion offense. I can't see if Nichols is red/black/blue in passing, but he looks more like a SG to me, long term. For right now, I would flip Leedy and Nichols.
You have five young guards on your roster (Leedy, Nichols, Berman, McGraw, Petersen) and none of them have a passer rating over 50. Unless one of those guys is high-high in passing and going to end up at least 75 pass, your offense is never going to run well.
Everyone is HIGH in Passing besides Leedy.
OK, that's nice. But now you are waiting at least 2 seasons for those guys to be good enough to be successful D2 motion PGs. They don't gain those 20-30 points overnight. Sometimes it is better to find the guy with the red 80 rating instead of the guy with the blue 45 rating.
And you need to not let your recruiting classes be determined by who left, but rather what you want your team to look like 3-4 seasons from now. In 3 seasons, you will three senior guards and one junior guard to go with a bunch of young front court players. As long as you keep letting who left dictate your recruiting, you will always have a heavy imbalance between your front court and your back court.
Assuming you have no plans to cut anyone, here is how I would recruit for the next few seasons if I was in your shoes.
Constantly updating a spreadsheet like that and thinking through how recruiting will impact my team several seasons down the line made a MASSIVE difference for me.
Wow. I really appreciate that. I understand completely. I'm semi-new to WIS. How good was my recruiting this season honestly?
It's a bit hard to tell without seeing your red/blacks/blues for attributes. Beyond class composition (If I am recruiting 5 players in a class, I am almost always going PG-SG-SF-PF-C so they make a cohesive starting 5), here is what I see.
The good:
You didn't recruit any guys with low work ethic. All of these guys should grow and probably maximize their potential.
Your guards have good speed and good perimeter shooting, especially Nichols & McGraw.
The bad:
Your guards are weak in passing & ball handling. And they are going to struggle defensively in M2M. If you play a fastbreak/press team, your backcourt will get eaten alive. On defense, your guards are either going to get beat to the basket, foul or both. And the low BH/P will keep you from being able to get the ball up the court.
I think you recruited a bunch of SGs. When recruiting a PG in a motion offense & M2M defense, you recruit for Passing/Ballhandling/Speed/Defense in that order. You don't need PER in a motion PG.
Here is a dirty little secret: most blue potential ratings have a rough maximum ceiling of 35-40 points. But PER and LP are the exception -- they have almost no ceiling. If you can find a PG that has excellent P/BH/SP/DEF and a low PER that is blue, grab him. I found a guy once in D3 who was
26 PER,
49 BH,
74 Pass as a freshman. By his senior year, he was 99 PER, 85 BH, 93 PASS.