@jayhawk-007
Not when recruited. The consensus was he was a project that had to change high schools to get playing time.
Embiid was one of the rare nonlinear developing 5s.
It's really only because of Embiid's freakishly fast and unexpected development that Skal and Diallo were hyped into being projected 30 mpg OADs instead of sushis in the first place.
The lesson of OADs increasingly should be:
THEY DON'T DEVELOP IN D1 IN ONE SEASON NO MATTER HOW MUCH THEY PLAY,
NO CORRELATION BETWEEN PT AND DEVELOPMENT.
None.
They can either perform at a D1 level, or not.
WHAT DETERMINES THE MPG OF AN OAD IS IF HIS ROLE CAN BE NARROWLY ENOUGH SCOPED THAT HE DOESNT HAVE TO IMPROVE.
Wiggins definitely did not improve. Self finally took the team saddle off him, which he wasn't ready for, for whatever reason, put it on the anomaly of Embiid and let Wigs do what he could, or was willing, to do.
This defines all the successful OAD that UK and Duke have had. NArrow scoping roles with 2ADs to go in and do what they could not do. Okafor was almost two dimensional in his role: score and rebound against weak inside teams. Guard the post only against strong teams inside.
Strangely, with few exceptions, OADs are really a kind of glamorous, but narrowly scoped role player in D1.
They are needed for flexible MUA, when extra athleticism, or some particular array of skill they
Possess without development is needed.
But even the best ones are only rarely cornerstones.
Remember: Anthony Davis went 1-10 against junior Jeff Withey, and Okafor completely disappeared the second half against UW's footer.
OADs are necessary role players to go deep regularly, but only intermittently essential to winning it all.
It's kind of counter intuitive, but nonetheless how it has shaken out.