With the Blackshear question answered, we can begin to develop a realistic picture of next season. Below are some thoughts.
1. This is, once again, a Calipari team that will struggle shooting the ball, and would have struggled even if the three-point line hadn’t been extended.
2. This roster may struggle with scoring in general. Most of the individual players project as tremendous athletes, defenders, and glue guys. Few are regarded as “buckets,” or even primary scoring options.
3. This team has the potential to be defensively elite. The length and athleticism across all positions stands out, and the team has gritty locker room leadership.
4. The team’s depth is very sound. Assuming realistic role flexibility, the depth by position is:
PG: 3
SG: 4
SF: 4
PF: 3
C: 3
In few past seasons has the roster been this evenly distributed.
5. Compared to previous teams, the roster most resembles 2017-18, but with several important upgrades to experience and guard depth.
6. There are a lot of question marks. In most seasons, we’ve had some good idea about what to expect. We all knew we were about to watch something special in 2014-15. We knew 2016-17’s backcourt would be electric; we knew PJ Washington would lead the team and be its best player in 2018-19. This year, it’s hard to say. The leading scorer could be any one of four players, and the starting lineup could easily include any of eight or nine different players.
7. This looks like an Elite Eight team, with anywhere from 6-10 losses during the regular season. A team with that kind of ability has as good of a chance as any other team to win a championship, but Kentucky doesn’t appear to have the separation from the pack that invites preseason Final Four or championship guarantees.
1. This is, once again, a Calipari team that will struggle shooting the ball, and would have struggled even if the three-point line hadn’t been extended.
2. This roster may struggle with scoring in general. Most of the individual players project as tremendous athletes, defenders, and glue guys. Few are regarded as “buckets,” or even primary scoring options.
3. This team has the potential to be defensively elite. The length and athleticism across all positions stands out, and the team has gritty locker room leadership.
4. The team’s depth is very sound. Assuming realistic role flexibility, the depth by position is:
PG: 3
SG: 4
SF: 4
PF: 3
C: 3
In few past seasons has the roster been this evenly distributed.
5. Compared to previous teams, the roster most resembles 2017-18, but with several important upgrades to experience and guard depth.
6. There are a lot of question marks. In most seasons, we’ve had some good idea about what to expect. We all knew we were about to watch something special in 2014-15. We knew 2016-17’s backcourt would be electric; we knew PJ Washington would lead the team and be its best player in 2018-19. This year, it’s hard to say. The leading scorer could be any one of four players, and the starting lineup could easily include any of eight or nine different players.
7. This looks like an Elite Eight team, with anywhere from 6-10 losses during the regular season. A team with that kind of ability has as good of a chance as any other team to win a championship, but Kentucky doesn’t appear to have the separation from the pack that invites preseason Final Four or championship guarantees.
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