In watching Wayne Selden now for two seasons, I'm curious about Selden's position as unquestioned starter for Kansas. It's not only coach Self. Literally ever projected or suggested lineup offered here includes Selden. So why the Selden free pass?
I believe the answer is simple from Self's standpoint - Self is sure that Selden is one of the best players on the team.
Right now, I'm not so sure.
Could Self be wrong about Selden?
Selden was the #12 player in the 2013 recruiting class. He is now a sophomore, and a player all looked to be an on court leader. But look at Selden's numbers. They are astoundingly pedestrian, and underwhelming.
In 12 games, Selden has played 31 minutes per game, second most on the team, and is averaging just 8.8 points per game. At 6'5", many envisioned Selden as different type of player, more physical, more active perhaps -- Selden is averaging just 3.3 rebounds per game.
One many times unmentioned issue is steals. Turnover creations is an issue that has been raised by Self with this team.Selden is perhaps the worst offender, averaging just .7 steals per game. Oubre has more steals in nearly half the minutes, and a rate of .047 per minute, which is nearly three times Selden (.018 per minute). That is astounding to me. Selden has just 7 steals in 372 minutes played. That's effectively nothing. All perimeter players have more than Selden per minute, except Greene (who has zero). So Selden is really an effective "zero" and Greene is an actual "zero."
Selden's three point shooting percentage hasn't improved much since last season. He stands at 34.1 (vs. 32.8%). Only Svi is lower among perimeter players. And three -- Greene, Oubre, Mason, and Graham are all substantially better than Selden from three.
Last season, Selden's name was present on multiple mock draft boards. Now, he's an afterthought. The most recent evidence in support of his drop in status was the poor performance against Kent St. Selden shot just 1-7 from the floor and got burned a number of time on defense.
Selden's per minute numbers are worse than his game averages would lead on. Selden is rebounding at a rate of .099 per minute played is the worst among the 11 scholarship players. His points per minute played is sixth on the team.
Further, we've seen Selden miss multiple opportunities as the basket and his defense has gone from good to suspect. Does anyone view Selden as a potential shut-down defender any more? That's not the conversation any longer.
To Selden's credit, he was spectacular against Florida, and he has done well in the assist department. With Graham out, we need him for a handful of minutes each game at the point.
But we need more from Selden. And it appears Self is content to simply run Selden out there for 30+ per game, regardless of result. Just last week, we saw the first chink in Selden's armor. Self said after the Kent St. game, "I’d like to see Brannen and Svi play more to put more pressure not only on Kelly but Wayne (Selden, five points, 1-of-7 shooting). We’ve got to get Wayne being more productive and consistent, too.”
Selden's numbers, in literally every category, are worse than Frank Mason. Brannen Greene averages .403 points per minute played (vs. Selden's .282) and .124 rebounds per minute (vs. Selden's .099).
Selden's possible replacements in the starting lineup -- Svi and Greene -- have their warts, to be sure. Svi is a pre-freshman given his age, and his development is a work in progress. Greene is a somewhat one dimensional player, who appears to be the worst perimeter defender on the team. Greene's one dimension has been marginalized by Oubre's three point shooting right now. Is there any reason to play Greene over Oubre? Greene is not able to get to the rim like Selden can (even if Selden isn't finishing). And Svi's scoring has not been better than Selden, from a numbers perspective. Hard to argue that either should displace Selden.
Here, I don't have a solid answer. My standard analysis on personnel is to go with the guy who will be your best player in March. Right now, I don't think there is a easy answer to that question.
The wildcard is Devonte Graham. Self has mentioned a preference to ball handling, and his preseason chatter was playing two ball handlers provided Kansas the best option. We see that Mason is a real-deal scoring option, shooting over 50% from three. Where would our lineup be right now if Devonte Graham had not gotten hurt?
If Graham could return to prior form, with Oubre cemented at the three, Selden's minutes could be at risk if he doesn't improve. But I doubt if Graham can return and impact the starting lineup. He'll need to get into shape, and catch up. His role might be taking Manning's job of emergency point guard.
So for now, it's Selden and more Selden. We just have to hope that Selden can find his game, and lift Kansas in the process.