Reading the board I saw some of the recurring criticism of Pikiell's player development. There is a lot of data and a real track record to evaluate. I was curious so I did an analysis.
Evidence for Pikiell’s player development (or lack thereof) should be judged by evidence in 3 buckets:
1. Guys who came in with expectations - did they meet expectations?
2. Guys who came in with little hype and got developed at Rutgers
3. Guys who left Rutgers for other high-majors and what actually happened after they left?
Looking at it that way, I think the overall answer is pretty clear: Pikiell absolutely has developed players at Rutgers. It seems very clear that he is very good at developing defense, toughness, rebounding, and role execution. The record on maximizing offensive upside is mixed, but definitely not clearly negative, with many data points.
1. Players who came in with expectations
This category is mixed, but on the whole strongly refutes the idea that Rutgers didn't develop or utilize talented players.
Cliff Omoruyi came in as a real national recruit — RSCI Top 100: No. 46 — and became exactly what Rutgers hoped he’d become: a high-level Big Ten center who made All-Big Ten and Big Ten All-Defense twice.
Same basic point with Dylan Harper and Ace Bailey. Harper was the No. 2 player in the 2024 247Sports rankings, and Bailey was also an elite national recruit; at Rutgers, Harper averaged 19.4 ppg and 4.0 apg as a freshman, while Bailey averaged 17.6 ppg and 7.2 rpg. They both produced at a high level, appeared on the relevant all-freshman teams, and achieved their lottery pick aspirations at the end of one and done seasons.
Montez Mathis came in with real recruiting buzz ranked by some as a 4 star, and he didn’t live up to that at Rutgers. After transferring to St. John’s, he was a little better, but not so much better that he becomes a major anti-Pikiell example.
Paul Mulcahy also fits here in a different way: he came in with a minor pedigree, became a good winning high-major player at Rutgers, and then got worse/similar after leaving for Washington.
2. Players who came in with little hype and got developed at Rutgers
This is the strongest evidence for Pikiell.
If you want the best argument for his player development, start with Geo Baker, Caleb McConnell, Ron Harper Jr., and Myles Johnson.
Geo Baker was a No. 232 247 recruit and developed into a 2x All-Big Ten guard. Caleb McConnell was a No. 344 composite recruit and became a 2x Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year. Myles Johnson was an 86-rated three-star prospect who developed into a Big Ten all-defense caliber center. Ron Harper Jr. was rated 88 by 247Sports and No. 57 at small forward, then became a 2x All-Big Ten player and AP honorable mention All-American. That’s a real development résumé.
Eugene Omoruyi was a late-blooming Canadian prospect who only started basketball in 10th grade, and 247 does not show him as a nationally ranked blue-chip recruit. At Rutgers he developed from 2.4 ppg as a freshman to 13.8 ppg and 7.2 rpg as a junior, earning All-Big Ten honorable mention.
This group is the clearest evidence that Pikiell can identify traits — toughness, feel, defensive instincts, competitiveness, size — and turn them into high-major value. A coach who develops Baker, McConnell, Harper Jr., and Myles Johnson is very obviously doing something right.
3. Players who left Rutgers for other high-majors
This is the best test of whether Rutgers was really holding players back. If Rutgers were the problem, you’d expect a consistent pattern of guys leaving and immediately becoming much better elsewhere at the same high-major level. That’s not what happened.
The relevant cases are Eugene Omoruyi to Oregon, Jacob Young to Oregon, Myles Johnson to UCLA, Cam Spencer to UConn, Paul Mulcahy to Washington, Lathan Sommerville to Washington, Cliff Omoruyi to Alabama, and Montez Mathis to St. John’s.
Of those, the clearest upgrades after leaving were Spencer and Eugene, but both came with important context. Spencer was better at UConn, but he was also stepping into one of the best offensive environments in the country, on a team that won the national title, and he already had a strong Rutgers season before leaving.
Omoruyi did improve significantly at Oregon, but he left Rutgers, sat out a full season under the old transfer rules, and then made a jump. That matters. Neither case is as simple as “Rutgers failed and somebody else fixed them."
After that, the pattern actually helps Rutgers more than it hurts it:
Bottom line:
Pikiell has clearly developed players at Rutgers. The strongest evidence is the number of lower-hype guys who became real Big Ten players under him, especially Baker, McConnell, Harper Jr., and Myles Johnson. The transfer record also helps him more than it hurts him, because most guys who left were either about the same, had smaller roles, or were less productive. The fairest criticism is not that he can’t develop players. It’s that Rutgers has generally been better at developing high-floor, tough, winning players than at maximizing offensive ceiling.
Evidence for Pikiell’s player development (or lack thereof) should be judged by evidence in 3 buckets:
1. Guys who came in with expectations - did they meet expectations?
2. Guys who came in with little hype and got developed at Rutgers
3. Guys who left Rutgers for other high-majors and what actually happened after they left?
Looking at it that way, I think the overall answer is pretty clear: Pikiell absolutely has developed players at Rutgers. It seems very clear that he is very good at developing defense, toughness, rebounding, and role execution. The record on maximizing offensive upside is mixed, but definitely not clearly negative, with many data points.
1. Players who came in with expectations
This category is mixed, but on the whole strongly refutes the idea that Rutgers didn't develop or utilize talented players.
Cliff Omoruyi came in as a real national recruit — RSCI Top 100: No. 46 — and became exactly what Rutgers hoped he’d become: a high-level Big Ten center who made All-Big Ten and Big Ten All-Defense twice.
Same basic point with Dylan Harper and Ace Bailey. Harper was the No. 2 player in the 2024 247Sports rankings, and Bailey was also an elite national recruit; at Rutgers, Harper averaged 19.4 ppg and 4.0 apg as a freshman, while Bailey averaged 17.6 ppg and 7.2 rpg. They both produced at a high level, appeared on the relevant all-freshman teams, and achieved their lottery pick aspirations at the end of one and done seasons.
Montez Mathis came in with real recruiting buzz ranked by some as a 4 star, and he didn’t live up to that at Rutgers. After transferring to St. John’s, he was a little better, but not so much better that he becomes a major anti-Pikiell example.
Paul Mulcahy also fits here in a different way: he came in with a minor pedigree, became a good winning high-major player at Rutgers, and then got worse/similar after leaving for Washington.
2. Players who came in with little hype and got developed at Rutgers
This is the strongest evidence for Pikiell.
If you want the best argument for his player development, start with Geo Baker, Caleb McConnell, Ron Harper Jr., and Myles Johnson.
Geo Baker was a No. 232 247 recruit and developed into a 2x All-Big Ten guard. Caleb McConnell was a No. 344 composite recruit and became a 2x Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year. Myles Johnson was an 86-rated three-star prospect who developed into a Big Ten all-defense caliber center. Ron Harper Jr. was rated 88 by 247Sports and No. 57 at small forward, then became a 2x All-Big Ten player and AP honorable mention All-American. That’s a real development résumé.
Eugene Omoruyi was a late-blooming Canadian prospect who only started basketball in 10th grade, and 247 does not show him as a nationally ranked blue-chip recruit. At Rutgers he developed from 2.4 ppg as a freshman to 13.8 ppg and 7.2 rpg as a junior, earning All-Big Ten honorable mention.
This group is the clearest evidence that Pikiell can identify traits — toughness, feel, defensive instincts, competitiveness, size — and turn them into high-major value. A coach who develops Baker, McConnell, Harper Jr., and Myles Johnson is very obviously doing something right.
3. Players who left Rutgers for other high-majors
This is the best test of whether Rutgers was really holding players back. If Rutgers were the problem, you’d expect a consistent pattern of guys leaving and immediately becoming much better elsewhere at the same high-major level. That’s not what happened.
The relevant cases are Eugene Omoruyi to Oregon, Jacob Young to Oregon, Myles Johnson to UCLA, Cam Spencer to UConn, Paul Mulcahy to Washington, Lathan Sommerville to Washington, Cliff Omoruyi to Alabama, and Montez Mathis to St. John’s.
Of those, the clearest upgrades after leaving were Spencer and Eugene, but both came with important context. Spencer was better at UConn, but he was also stepping into one of the best offensive environments in the country, on a team that won the national title, and he already had a strong Rutgers season before leaving.
Omoruyi did improve significantly at Oregon, but he left Rutgers, sat out a full season under the old transfer rules, and then made a jump. That matters. Neither case is as simple as “Rutgers failed and somebody else fixed them."
After that, the pattern actually helps Rutgers more than it hurts it:
- Jacob Young was roughly similar (slightly worse statistically) at Oregon to what he had been at Rutgers, which suggests Rutgers had already gotten close to his best version
- Myles Johnson had smaller production at UCLA but played at a roughly similar level
- Mulcahy had a clear drop at Washington
- Sommerville has had a smaller role at Washington so far
- Cliff was efficient at Alabama, but in a lower-volume role and no significant offensive breakout
- Mathis was somewhat better at St. John’s in a system better suited for him, but not enough to count as some huge blossom-elsewhere story
Bottom line:
Pikiell has clearly developed players at Rutgers. The strongest evidence is the number of lower-hype guys who became real Big Ten players under him, especially Baker, McConnell, Harper Jr., and Myles Johnson. The transfer record also helps him more than it hurts him, because most guys who left were either about the same, had smaller roles, or were less productive. The fairest criticism is not that he can’t develop players. It’s that Rutgers has generally been better at developing high-floor, tough, winning players than at maximizing offensive ceiling.