We overscheduled the non-league games something fierce this year. It was always going to be a rebuilding year of sorts, but we went 2-8 in non-league play. Thankfully, we've righted the ship to a point in the Ivy League. With three league games to go, we're 12-11 overall, 10-3 against Ivy League opponents. It would be a surprise if we won the league (Duquesne's really, REALLY good), but we gave them a game at their place earlier this year, so it wouldn't be a total shock.
Speaking of total shocks, my three-man recruiting class was done very early, and it's GOOD, too. Here they are...
Oleg Repinski (***, international so unranked) - Yep, a C prestige program got a three-star recruit, and Repinski will start as a freshman. We graduate our top two point guards, which leaves pretty gaping holes in the depth chart. That allowed me to promise A LOT to Repinski, who was also contacted by Nebraska and Providence.
He's a capable player now, one that knows our offense (and, I think, the M2M defense; it says he pressed in high school, but he wanted a M2M defense, which is a clue). That's the good news. The bad news is, he just won't get much better than he is right now in a lot of key categories. The "very low" passing potential really hurts, and I wouldn't be surprised if he gets passed on the depth chart as he gets older. Still, though, he's a very good get that fills an immediate need. At a minimum, he'll be a very good defender who can play significant minutes at both guard spots without being a liability on either end of the floor.
William Bernard (**, #110 overall, #24 SG) - In addition to our backcourt needs, we also had a pressing issue at SF. William Rose, our best player, is set to graduate, leaving just one returning SF on the roster.
If you look at Bernard's skills from a SG standpoint, he looks OK, but not great. His low ball handling and passing numbers are problems. However, if you look at him as a SF, those issues become much, much smaller. He's going to turn into a very good, versatile scorer with outstanding speed for his position, as well as a capable defender with ample knowledge of the system we run. I promised him 15 minutes as a freshman, and he'll get that (or close to it). Once Jeffery Stewart graduates, he should be an excellent two-year starter.
Tarek Herrman (#80 PG) - When a player like Herrman is the #3 recruit in a three-player class, you're doing okay. Backcourt depth is going to be an issue next year, and Herrman is versatile enough to see time at both guard spots. Ideally, though, he'll spend more time at the PG spot, since his ball handling and passing numbers will wind up in a good spot.
He's not without his holes. He won't get better defensively (though he isn't a total liability), and his low-ish work ethic may be a problem early on. I do wish he was faster, but his potential there is encouraging, and he's a good enough shooter to where he can't be ignored from long-range. I don't know if he'll ever start, but he'll be a useful cog in the system.
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RECRUITING THOUGHTS
Phew!!!
After the last two recruiting classes, I was hoping for an uneventful go-round, and that's what I got. My haul also wound up being stronger than most recruiting classes I've ever had at the D1 level. Add in that Ernest Henderson, from last season, will be a redshirt freshman next year, and this quartet has the chance to do significant damage by the time they're done at Columbia.
It's not like it's a perfect group. Repinski won't get better, Bernard needs a position switch, and Herrman's ceiling is probably "sixth man who plays a ton of minutes." Still, we needed an immediate starter in the backcourt, a guy who could instantly be the #2 SF, and another backcourt body that, ideally, could run the offense in a pinch. We filled all three needs, and did so really, really early.
GRADE: A-. It probably could've been better, but this is really, REALLY good.