Okay, time for senior retrospectives!
Ronald Johns - When Ronald Johns was a recruit, he was a point guard without top-notch passing skills. However, when I landed him, I envisioned him as a shooting guard, or even a small forward, that provided a top-notch perimeter threat on one end and a defensive stopper on the other. That's precisely what he turned out to be, and the redshirt year he took meant he was a high-impact player as an upperclassman (and the NEC Player of the Year as a senior). For what he was, he was excellent, and he'll definitely be missed.
RECORDS: 8th in points (1,460), 5th in 3-pointers made (300), 9th in field goals made (491), 15th in 3-point percentage (44.4%)
William Sheely - Sheely was one of our most valuable players, yet he didn't start a single game. When we moved to the full-court press, his so-so speed wasn't a strength, and when Jay Ronning signed and was too much of an asset not to start, someone had to sit. This was Sheely, but he settled in, captained our second unit, and provided much-needed depth. He averaged double-figures in scoring as a junior and senior and scored nearly 1,000 points in his career, all while, again, never being in the starting lineup. He was the quintessential "glue guy" for us, and his graduation leaves a pretty big hole.
Terry Cohn - When we switched to a full-court press, we scored many more points in transition. This benefited our guards, but hurt our forwards, and Terry Cohn's stats suffered for it. He was still a very good starter at the low-D1 level, with his main limitations being just-OK stamina and lousy free throw shooting. Still, he played a lot of minutes for some strong teams.
David Allums - Allums wasn't an exceptional prospect, but he was very close to campus and proved to be a pretty strong rebounder. Like Cohn, he was never going to put up insane numbers given our press/transition game, but he was a useful starter this season for a team that won 27 games. That counts for something.
RECORDS: 7th in FG% (54.5%)