This. NCAA play is watered down. I think the last great college champ was 09 UNC. The paradigm was just starting to shift at that point. ‘99 or ‘01 Duke is miles ahead of the last 4 champs. Florida in 06/07, UNC in 05, Kansas 08 would trounce most of the recent teams.Most of the teams that have been moving in and out of the top ten this year would struggle to be steady top 20 teams in past years. You’ve got 3-5 really good teams and even they have some holes (really young, no star on team) and thus the top 1/4 of teams and bottom 1/2 teams don’t have near the talent gap as in past years. Just for example, even this year’s UVA and Nova teams aren’t half as talented as that they were in prior years.
Your spot on on both theories,the College game has been eroded by the one and done..I've said before,i long for the days when upper classmen comprise most of your starting line up..as to theory 2..goes to the same point,it takes time to learn to play good defenceTheory 1: A lot of the best teams no longer consist of senior-led best players, these January road games are tough on young teams. This is another way of saying the NCAA is watered down, the NBA is eating up all of the top talent after guys freshman/sophomore years, meaning there are less loaded teams each year.
Theory 2: Scoring is way up, just causes more variance in the score. 5 years ago, seemed crazy to see a game in the 80's, so many games now are played in the 80's and 90's. More teams use to win on on defense, now more teams are trying to win by outscoring teams. Defense travels, shooting doesn't. (unless your Gary Trent JR in Coral Gables)
......or once they change the One-And-Done rule.I miss guys like Grant Hill, Shane Battier, Kyle Singler that hung around and have their jerseys retired, I know Singler didn't get his number retired but was right there. We may not see another jersey retired at Duke unless Grayson goes on a tear and is a first team all american.
I think this is a great take. It's annoying seeing the typical "These dang kids and the AAU game is ruining college basketball." I've been on board all along saying that guys are just getting better and better each year. Is it due to science? Training programs now are insanely effective given modern technology. Is it due to specialization of sports? Kids now seem to stick to one sport at a younger age than it used to be.I think there is a big increase in basketball parity across the board. I don’t see it as a watering-down, as much as a skills-level increasing. Most of the D1 players played on elite and AAU teams from a very early age. There are only so many slots on a team AND the top schools are only keeping their talent for 1 year.
This is probably a slightly different spin on @jwill133 ’s theories.
I think there is a big increase in basketball parity across the board. I don’t see it as a watering-down, as much as a skills-level increasing. Most of the D1 players played on elite and AAU teams from a very early age. There are only so many slots on a team AND the top schools are only keeping their talent for 1 year.
This is probably a slightly different spin on @jwill133 ’s theories.
Elton Brand was 20 as a rookie, played on maybe the worst team in NBA history (the post Jordan Bulls). Grant Hill was 21 as a rookie. Jayson Tatum is 19 years old, Ingram was 18 years old as a rookie.Kids are probably more athletic today, but I don't think they're better than they were years ago. The money in the nba is so big, guys that aren't really ready are bolting. Tatum is having a solid rookie year at 14 points a game, but Josh Jackson is averaging about 10, and Kennard is at 6 points a game.
Elton Brand's rookie year was 20 points and 10 boards, Grant Hill was 20 points, 6 rebounds and 5 assists. Laettner was 18 points, 9 rebounds and 3 assists. Ingram had a solid rookie year at 17 points and 7 rebounds.
I think maybe 5-10 guys max are ready to contribute after one season in college. I can't blame them for leaving for the $$ though, but until a rule of some form changes, this is what we will deal with.
That was my point. Few are ready, yet many bolt. I probably would bolt too.Elton Brand was 20 as a rookie, played on maybe the worst team in NBA history (the post Jordan Bulls). Grant Hill was 21 as a rookie. Jayson Tatum is 19 years old, Ingram was 18 years old as a rookie.
Instead of comparing rookie seasons, age is a much better barometer, because it's just different now. A 21 year old Tatum though, now that will be scary...
True, obviously. As compared to 20 year's ago where none were ready (save 1 or 2 High School Guys who just skipped college), and 1 or 2 would go.That was my point. Few are ready, yet many bolt. I probably would bolt too.
There is no "probably". Someone says "Here is a $x,xxx,xxx.xx to come and play a game...." Is your first response "Let me think about it"?That was my point. Few are ready, yet many bolt. I probably would bolt too.