Let me explain how rhetoric works, since you don't seem to understand. You create a hypothesis then prove the hypothesis by the application of facts and reason. What you don't do is create a hypothesis, assume its truth, demand eccentric quantums of evidence (name 15 players that I have seen play personally) that disproves it, cherry pick data that supports your hypothesis and ignore evidence that tends to negate it. Hope that helps.
Amar is more comparable. Lots of minutes hardly any production.
Yes, the fruit of Lavs summer recruiting trip the French Riviera stunk, here we agree.
Freudenberg did not get that much burn so he is almost a redshirt, does not count.
Freudenberg averaged 9 minutes a game, Trible 15 minutes a game. Am I to believe that 6 minutes a game is the difference between nearly a red shirt and solid minutes?
Marco was solid talent- what hurt his production was Lav poorly used him.
(1) Bourgault averaged 3 points and one rebound a game and shot 29 percent from three in his first year - solid talent! - and didn't play at all his second year because he stunk. (2) If his performance can be excused because he was "poorly used," can Trimble's? Or do you think that he's a natural power forward who should have been the sixth man as a freshman.
He had a good handle and could have been decent for us if coaching was better. Much better player than Trimble. Better player than Hooper too. I have a bit more intel on him too because sometimes I would drop into practice and he was scout team and I would see him play very well. Limited on court minutes does not tell story.
Practice? You talking about practice?
Hooper is tough one- could have been used better and can shoot when he is in rhythm, but defense liability and way too one dimensional. He was in better shape than Trimble though.
More feeble excuses. Hooper stunk and lost us at least one game I can remember. And PS sophomore Bryan Trimble could snap Max Hooper like a twig.
Sophomore Phil Greene- Now that is crazy talk on two fronts. First, you cannot just say someone's year. You have to say the player period.
That was a little joke and anyway no I don't have to say the player period, because (a) you don't get to set the parameters of the debate which seems to be in your case that any evidence that tends to disprove what you think true is illegimate and (b) it's illegimate to compare a complete career to half of one. Unless you're arguing that in the five years you've been watching basketball in your opinion Trimble was the worst player you've ever seen who wasn't poorly used by dopey Steve Lavin, in which case who cares.
Second, your a stats guy so here is this:
https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/player/gamelog/_/id/57022/type/mens-college-basketball/year/2013
A solid season before he got hurt- Trimble can only dream to put up a 1/3 of those numbers and production.
Yeah, it wasn't Trimble's job to put up those numbers. It was Trimble's job to play defense and hoist up the occasional three. Which he did quite well. As opposed to a shooting guard who shot 22 percet from three, because he's not doing his job well at all.
Speaking of numbers I went and looked at how ice in his veins Mr Clutch Phil Greene fared in the post season over the course of his career: in 8 games he scored 67 points, shooting 30 percent from the floor (27-89) and 22 percent from three (6-27). Most clutchiest player ever.
So realistically on this list the closest you have are Amar and Hooper. You cannot name 5.
I don't have to name five and I certainly don't have to name five you've seen play personally. That you've never heard of Heath Orvis or Thomas Jasilionustein or Tom Bayne or Abe Keita or Jack Wolfenstien or Mohamed Diakite or Liam Beisty or Ed Brown and the list goes on, it doesn't mean they didn't exist, it just means you're historically ignorant.