Quote: Originally posted by dalter on 6/02/2010Yes, especially at the lower levels, you really have to decide what's important for you. Again, I'll say that if it's a choice between a player that you think might be better for triangle and a guy who's just a better player, I would go with B every single time.
Agree 100%. I think the biggest mistake D3 coaches make is trying to get jack-of-all-trades prospects. Every recruit in D is flawed in some way; the key, imo, is to recruit guys who have the biggest projectable strengths, whatever those strengths may be, and then match your team settings to those strengths.
Example: My D3 team was top-5 nationally in rebounding a few years ago, because I happened to find 3 recruits who were big-time rebounders. Now, I'm an average rebounding team, but I'm going to have great perimeter defenders for the next 3 seasons. That frees me up to play more "-" defense to help my SF's and big men. Recruit the best overall talent you can, and the rest takes care of itself.