You've beaten this drum consistently, and to a certain extent I agree with you. However, the dynamics changed when Poythress went down.
Truly platooning post Poythress injury would have meant major minutes for Hawkins. Not sure that was the best solution.
That being said, I believe Cal would have tightened the rotation even if Poy stayed healthy. Seemed to be a tight leash on Lee.
And all due respect, but the real point to this particular thread is that Pat Forde is a trolling loser.
No doubt you are correct that Pat Forde is a trolling loser.
As far as the question of platooning, although I was a huge fan of what I would call 'full platoons' (which at least in my mind they sub 5-for-5 for at least 30 minutes, which has been shown to be enough to beat opponent into submission), even after Alex Poythress went down with injury UK was still very successful with modified platoons (i.e. variations where either Hawkins (or potentially Willis) took the 10th slot or in cases where one of the players from the 1st unit would stay on the court and leak into the 2nd unit etc.)
BTW, the stats are very clear that it worked. In fact the two games that UK clearly went away from much of any platooning in the mid-part of the season were against Ole Miss and Texas A&M, and those were near disasters.
People should have realized at that time that platooning held tangible benefits which couldn't be recaptured otherwise. Those 'modified platoons' still provided UK with advantages which they otherwise would never be able to achieve. But beyond that and most importantly, it ensured that UK made use of its deep bench.
Cal could have abandoned platoons altogether but still made an effort to develop and keep all his players engaged and utilize a deep bench during the course of the game (like Pitino did in '96). Doing that, IMO it still would have been a better option than what Cal ultimately ended up doing, which was shortening the bench and in the process not taking advantage of what was the team's greatest strength.
BTW, I'm not so sure that if Cal had gone back and played 'full platoons' against Wisconsin by playing Hawkins that it would have been a bad thing.
With Hawkins on the 1st unit it would have allowed UK to pressure the ball 94 feet (and be relieved by Ulis with the 2nd unit who could continue the on-ball pressure). This would have forced Wisconsin's guards to work harder to initiate their offense, and not allow them to set the tempo. As it was, Wisconsin's guards were allowed far too much latitude IMO in how and at what time they wanted to attack UK from the perimeter. And that only became worse as the game progressed and UK got visibly tired, and in the end Wisconsin's guards were allowed to pick UK apart.