How does being at the game give you more of an understanding of how he played than watching it on TV?
It makes a huge difference. Just ask Bobre
You're learning. It'd be nice if scouts could stay home but it just doesn't work that way.
That's why I actually go and watch these kids play HS and AAU. So I don't watch a highlight video and wax poetic.
True, but there's a difference between what you do - seeing recruits in person rather than just highlights, and watching a full game in person and watching a full game on tv. You're not missing as much when you see a full game, even if it's on tv.
As far as Gift goes, to me it's this simple - I may think I'm a basketball-wiz, but our coaches get paid for their acumen and I respect them a lot. As the season wore on, they saw more of Gift, and even though we were losing players (Nuri, Stith) they chose to play Gift less and less. They would rather have an all freshmen frontline of 6'8, 6'6, 6'5 than play Gift major minutes. That tells me a lot.
From my own perspective I think it was clear that once teams saw a game video of him, and realized he wraps his arm around the defender when he spins... that was all the scouting they needed to know. It took away Gift's best offensive move.
As for the Kentucky game, I do think he played more aggressively. And his aggressiveness on the boards was only half the reason that was his best night of the year... to me the big reason he was more effective that night than most was that he didn't turn the ball over. One game later against Detroit he had 5 or 6 turnovers. That habit of dribbling the ball off your foot can be a killer.
IMO Dave hit the nail on the head; Gift is a contributor at this level but not difference maker. And that's ok.