Nick is now averaging:
14.0 ppg
8.2 rpg
2.5 bpg
shooting 63% from the field
shooting 76% from the free throw line (16/21).
Nick deserves some praise. Great improvement so far, Nick! :clap::clap:
Definitely has made some improvement. Let’s hope it continues to show when the competition gets a little better.
I can remember before the season we were all having doubts about Richards. We all hoped to see improvement this season, but I don't know if anyone really expected what we've seen so far. He is blossoming before our eyes. I really think this is just the beginning for him, too. This is really his first opportunity with extended minutes and touches in multiple games. It's his show now, though. He's going to get 25-30 minutes every night out. With that kind of time, he's going to keep improving. I couldn't be more happy for him and the team.
I’m still not sold on him. He has zero hands.
This is part of my mojo thing.
I can remember before the season we were all having doubts about Richards. We all hoped to see improvement this season, but I don't know if anyone really expected what we've seen so far. He is blossoming before our eyes. I really think this is just the beginning for him, too. This is really his first opportunity with extended minutes and touches in multiple games. It's his show now, though. He's going to get 25-30 minutes every night out. With that kind of time, he's going to keep improving. I couldn't be more happy for him and the team.
But couldn't we find flaws with any big guy in the second/third tier? Walter McCarty was no real low post threat under Pitino, but he was used according to his strengths. We see the same of guys like Reid Travis (marginal shooter, limited defensively); Erik Daniels (lacking in strength/shooting ability for an interior stretch four guy) or his pal Chuck Hayes (lacking height for a 5 man); Rodney Dent (pretty one-dimensional offensively). The list goes on. All those guys started for teams that won 30 games or more at UK.
I'm not making a case that Nick is the second coming of WCS or anything, but he's doing exactly what Cal needs him to do - rebound, block shots, make free throws, be at least competent on offense.
This is what we expected out of EJ and just hoped Nick would be consistent.I can remember before the season we were all having doubts about Richards. We all hoped to see improvement this season, but I don't know if anyone really expected what we've seen so far. He is blossoming before our eyes. I really think this is just the beginning for him, too. This is really his first opportunity with extended minutes and touches in multiple games. It's his show now, though. He's going to get 25-30 minutes every night out. With that kind of time, he's going to keep improving. I couldn't be more happy for him and the team.
Nick is the primary example to why I hope to see UK get ahead of the sponsorship rule change. If Cal keeps these secondish/thirdish-tier guys around UK for three years at a time, we're going to see some incredible shifts in our program. Here's my very developmentally raw suggestion:
1. The sponsorship element is coming. Our fans need to accept this reality and get behind it now before the change officially comes. Rhetorically fighting for "amateurism" does nothing at this point.
2. In light of the coming rule/legal change, UK needs to identify what has been it's greatest weakness in the Cal Era ( retaining 2nd/3rd tier players) and turn it into a strength. How do we do that as a program?
3. The answer to point two might go like this: get a sponsorship conglomerate of, say, 12 to 15 businesses. They collectively pull together a few hundred thousand dollars. In exchange, a player like Richards allows them to use him image for their own marketing purposes. Richards, being a low level NBA player (but also a potential high level college player) could then make a few hundred thousand off his image/name.
4. If guys like Richards/EJ/Brooks made perhaps $200,000/annually off their image/brand, it might give them a bit more incentive to stick around for that crucial third year of college. NBA two-way contracts don't pay much (Poythress made less than $80,000 one season), and the D-League's highest pay is less than $160,000/year.
5. Ultimately, it's still a stretch that these guys would want to stick around, but it's better than the present situation that doesn't help them financially at all. A guy like EJ might be more comfortable sticking around school for an extra year while also getting a jump start on his financial earnings by walking out of UK with a few hundred thousand to his name.
But why do we label his hands as poor when he so effortlessly gets the lob dunks almost like Willie did in his era? I'll agree that his hands to hold on to the ball in the paint with his back to the basket isn't great....but he at least has good enough hands to grab tough lob dunks in traffic.I’m still not sold on him. He has zero hands.
This is part of my mojo thing.
But why do we label his hands as poor when he so effortlessly gets the lob dunks almost like Willie did in his era? I'll agree that his hands to hold on to the ball in the paint with his back to the basket isn't great....but he at least has good enough hands to grab tough lob dunks in traffic.
Agreed if the zebras would allow.If Nick could fight for position and hold it a little longer in the post would be amazing. In the end, I’m proud of Nick for seeing this thing through and not getting down on himself.
I’m not going to lie, I was one of those that thought if the team had to depend on him then they were in trouble, glad I was wrong.
EJ has titanic shoulders. He’ll never do it but if he stayed four years he’d be a much better version of those grown men Bama and LSU are always terrorizing us with because they have no NBA future to leave for.I like EJ’s game as of late too. Attacking the rim, rebounding some. Solid D. I could still do without his hideous long jumpers, but at least he’s hitting a few now.