It definitely is a viable offense. I mostly run it just because I love stats and hate slowdown games in the 50’s. Here’s some of things I look for in players:
I group players into 3 positions guards, forwards, and bigs. I generally have 5-6 guards, 3-4 forwards, and 2-3 bigs. It is important to have speed at every position. At D2 I want players to end up with a minimum of 70 spd for guards, 50 spd for forwards, and 25 spd for bigs.
Guards are pretty similar to guards in other systems. Speed is the most important attribute. If I had my choice of 5 guards I’d have two outside shooters, a pure pt, and a couple players with high spd/ath (with at least one having decent LP). The high spd/ath guards can cause serious foul trouble to opposing teams.
For forwards I look for versatility. Ath and Spd are still very important, but I’d also look for BH and Pass. TO’s are a big issue in the FB, so, it helps to have decent BH and Pass at all positions. Pretty much every category besides SB, Sta, and Dur are important for these positions. This is an advantage to the FB because many other coaches pass on these types of players. This guy is still pretty young, but I think once his spd goes up 10-15 more pts he’ll be an ideal forward (high LP, Per, and Pass)
I like versatility from my bigs too, but you can get by with a couple of more traditional bigs. That said this is the hardest mold to recruit for because you don’t want to take a player that will never be above 20 spd and that limits your pool of candidates. I also am big on getting high rebounding from these spots. I would rather have an elite ath/reb combo than ath/lp combo because usually a few of my forwards can score inside.
One major benefit from the style of play is that with a ath/spd advantage you can live from the FT line.
Depth is also a big issue. Bench matchups are almost as important as the starting five matchups.
The major fallback is that you’ll have lots of TO’s.
If you choose to run the FB with the FCP it makes stamina and depth much more important. With just the FB you need depth or stamina, but can get away with just having one of the two.
3/27/2012 4:21 PM (edited)