by BEARZ77 » April 19th, 2020, 9:05 pm
For me an example would be Nik Tata. Now I'm glad we got Tata because we needed bench depth with size behind Prim, and I hope he out performs my expectations, which for me is giving us about 10-12 minutes of reasonably competitive play off the bench. Now I could try to make him out like something more, I mean he's 6'10 with a large frame, he's the 63rd ranked juco, and he shot almost 74% from the field last year against decent juco competition. But if he's gonna be a major factor for us, then either something bad has happened or he plays way beyond his history. Now injuries can happen, Prim has some chronic leg issues that limited him some last year, and big guys foul a lot, so Tata was an important get. But he averaged 8 ppg and 6 rbs as a starter. I certainly wouldn't expect him to exceed those numbers even if he was forced into the lineup under some circumstances, and reasonable assumptions would say even if used extensively he probably wouldn't match those. That's just being realistic. Sometimes guys outperform their history or mature late, or find a team that their skills fill a nitch etc etc. But usually they are who they are.
Saw a report the other day detailing how most guys who were high performers at lower level d-1 programs and jumped up to significantly higher competition, mostly assumed complementary roles or less in their new setting with significantly lesser stats. A friend on the Bear nation board who's a stat guy by profession has developed a system whereby he takes juco stats and plugs them into a formula to predict how they might perform at the D-1 level , and it's been pretty accurate a lot of times and mostly it assumes lesser stats and performance especially in that first year. A guy like Prim who was a top 2 juco and averaged 20 and 10 and shot over 60% , has a good 1st year at MSU but goes for 13 and 5 and shoots 47%. That's just how it tends to work. About the only guy we've had that matched his juco levels was Alize Johnson, but he was one of those late bloomers who kept growing from 6'4 as a HS senior to 6'9 as a college senior and was able to keep a lot of his agility and handling skills he had when smaller. Now , there's always outliers and I'm sure everyone can name several they've seen, but the point is , they're outliers; you don't make a living believing they are routinely gonna match or exceed previous performance,and most likely they will perform somewhere below that. But hey that's part of recruiting optimism, and we're all guilty at some level.
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