I do not think listing Hatten as the third best guard that we've had in my 25 years as
a fan is sh*tting on him.
You're denigrating his accomplishments to make Ponds look better by comparison.
What would providing the wrong stats for ponds in comparison to Hatten be considered as?
Here are the stats I go by. And I don't care about the years because basketball has changed and good players don't stick around past Soph year anymore.
Hatten-41-25 / 16-16 BE
1 NCAA appearance and 1 NIT championship
Hardy-38-28 / 18-18 BE
1 NCAA appearance
1 NIT appearance
Harrison 1st two years-30-35 / 14-22 BE
1 NIT appearance
Ponds-28-32 / 10-21
I have Ponds ranked below Hatten and above Hardy and Harrison as a player.
As far as his legacy goes, so far he is more in step with Harrison at this point and well below Hatten and Hardy. If he stays another year he could possibly overtake Hatten in my opinion but if he leaves after this year and only can manage an NIT or worse then years from now when you think back on him, his legacy will be lacking compared to other similar players.
St. John's was 8-8 in conference the year before Hatten with the same (younger) players and a freshman Omar Cook. They were 9-7 adding a junior Hatten and a soph Stanley as transfers and Eric King as a frosh while losing the great Alpha Bangura to transfer the following year. Both years they finished third in the Big East's East division.
St. John's was 1-17 in the Big East before Ponds and went 8-12 with him, Lovett, and Owens.
Glover and Emanuel played every minute of the center position and sometimes as PF and C together for a Big East championship team. Willie Shaw averaged 14 ppg as the second leading scorer on an 8-8 Big East team the year prior. It's not like Hatten was taking over a team that couldn't compete.
I get that Hatten team was limited, but they were big and deep. They were physical as hell too. Always crashing glass.
BTW Donald Emanuel's record was 87-44 and he played at least 31 games on three separate NCAA tournament teams.
Below is the stats for the team Hatten carried to the tourney. I posted this because I feel bad that some of the younger posters might think some of the guys Marillac keeps talking about were good. They were not. Please see below. And honestly my memories of them are even worse than their terrible stats indicate.
Eric King 1 FR F 6-6 230 Brooklyn, NY 7.6 Pts, 4.5 Reb, 0.7 Ast
Willie Shaw 23 SO G 6-6 190 Bronx, NY 6.8 Pts, 2.3 Reb, 1.0 Ast
Donald Emanuel 33 SR F 6-9 230 Houston, TX 6.1 Pts, 2.8 Reb, 1.0 Ast
Sharif Fordham 3 SR G 6-4 200 Far Rockaway, NY 5.1 Pts, 3.5 Reb, 0.9 Ast
Kyle Cuffe 25 SO F 6-9 243 Bronx, NY 5.6 Pts, 3.0 Reb, 0.6 Ast
Alpha Banurga 15 JR G 6-6 215 Lanham, MD 5.6 Pts, 2.2 Reb, 0.8 Ast
Andre Stanley 14 JR G 6-4 204 Brooklyn, NY 3.2 Pts, 2.5 Reb, 1.7 Ast
Abe Keita 4 JR C 6-11 222 Winchendon, MA 2.4 Pts, 2.6 Reb, 0.3 Ast
Tristan Smith 2 FR G 6-1 185 Amityville, NY 1.4 Pts, 0.9 Reb, 0.8 Ast
Mohamed Diakite 44 SO C 6-11 235 Rockville, MD 2.1 Pts, 1.6 Reb, 0.1 Ast
Curtis Johnson 52 SO C 7-3 308 Norfolk, VA 0.8 Pts, 1.2 Reb, 0.0 Ast
Jon Scheiman 11 JR G 6-1 178 New York, NY 0.3 Pts, 0.2 Reb, 0.2 Ast
Danny Bovain 55 JR G 6-3 0 1.0 Pts, 0.0 Reb, 0.0 Ast