@ParisHawk
"Would we have been better this year with three other freshmen not good enough to be OADs?
Perhaps not this season, but likely next. Clearly, Embiid, the guy who was not projected OAD, was the only player of our OADs that we clearly could not have done without.
The question is how much better were we with Wigs and Selden, than the guys we have behind them? HEM nailed it here. Wigs and Silden had higher ceilings than anyone they played against, but their playing present levels of performance were often exceeded by non draft choices.
Unless you come out of high school bigger, stronger, faster, and a better dribbler and Trey shooter, than experienced D1 players, you are just another freshman about to get schooled, Regardless of how high your ceiling is and how are you were going to be drafted for how good you will be in the NBA in three years.
Unless we win the rain this season, the only two lasting effects of having signed Selden and Wiggins will be:
1.) The POR for having been able to sign them at all; and
2.) The need to replace them immediately, because long-term players were not developed.
I am not salting Self. He tried it largely without OADs for 10 years and only got one ring and beat for a second one by a team with six OAD's. He was reaching the pinnacle of his career. He had a lot of players depart. He had to try it sooner or later.
What I am saying, is that unless he wins a ring, the experiment have turned out not significantly better than playing largely without OADS, and have resulted in him having to fill large voids year-to-year with the same kind of high ceiling, adequate performing OADS, or, like Humpty Dumpty, have a great fall, because the long-term players were not being developed.
Self is masterful at trying to split the difference and invert situations to find opportunities that are not readily apparent. He is a master at resisting doing one, or the other, and instead doing some of both. I believe his initial idea was to try to sign two OAD's each season from now on, bless maintaining a three man, long-term nucleus developing and only needing infrequent replacement. But when Wiggins surprised him and decided to come to KU, he could not very well say no to the reputed next LeBron. Coaching the best players is part of what great coaches strive to do. He had to take the bait. But as him has written repeatedly since the signing of Wiggins took place, there were going to be adverse consequences for signing Wiggins. Self crossed a tipping point in the nucleus of the team. Embiid, Wiggins, and Selden became that nucleus. And that nucleosis needed three quarters of the season, not to reach its high ceiling, but just to become competent Division I players. Alas none but embed could ever become strong finishers at the room. And Wiggens and Selden still cannot play a fast paced game without baking pop tarts at a high rate.
There are 11 games to go, so the experimental results are not complete. It could all come roses for Self, if Joel comes back, Andrew finds his mojo on both ends of the floor, and Selden keeps guarding and protecting. But if this team were to lose to WVU, and again early in the conference tournament, then this season could in the best case scenario at most be an Andrew and the miracles, or Joel and the miracles, type of situation; I.e., A situation where not the best team gets hot and when's six in a row.
Is that really what the gambit of signing so many OAD's was about?
Finally, one thing I remember about Danny and the miracles: they were one heck of a sound defensive team.
Can this team become that before the big Dance starts?
What gives me the most hope for this team are as follows:
1.) Joel comes back employs six games in the madness;
2.) Self saying as he did after the Texas Tech game, okay, now let's get serious, employing that he has of late been working on the stuff, rather than actually putting the spurs to the team;
3.) Wiggins having a higher gear then we have seen so far; and
4) Tariqk coming into his own and actually reconstituting this team the way he did against Texas Tech.
Against Texas Tech, to you for the last three quarters of the game, played like a traditional Bill self team. They guarded well and actually ran the offense. Failure to run the offense effectively has plagued the OAD laden team with Embiid at the hub all season long. Of course it is much easier to run the stuff against a Texas Tech than it is against Marcus Smart, Markel Brown, LeBryant Nash lead defense. But what I saw in Tarik, was a conventional big man doing conventional things in a conventional offense and seeing it operate fluidly for the first time this season. Not to knock Joel, but she is not intuitive yet about setting screens and hedging in a way that makes the offense and defense cohesive. Joel's strength is to reduce inside shooting percentages to levels that And opponent cannot win with.
If Tarik can get the team to run the stuff effectively against the pressure defense of WVU, then I think we have made a major breakthrough capable of carrying this team to a ring, by playing the five with a committee of Black and Embiid.
But still, we are on the OAD merry-go-round, like it or not.