Hmmmmm
https://twitter.com/Peter_R_Casey/status/312229757741838337
62% of Georgetown's minutes were played this year by freshmen and sophomores. Second time in five years Hoyas have no seniors.
I see Michigan having 72% of their mins played by freshmen and sophs, 97% including juniors. Looks like the only seniors they have might be walkons.
It's not just on the court were youth is important but off the court as well. Understanding how to balance practice and studies, etc. They learn how to be student athletes from the upper classmen. On the court, its skill. In 2 years I believe Lavin will be able to bring in higher quality players who are more well rounded and could contribute more right away. That's the difference between us and those other programs that were mentioned, but in time that will change. When Lavin took over he brought in the best players he could, and it started on the defensive end. Sure it hurts the eyes not being able to score, but by being able to stop other teams from scoring gave us a chance to win.
^^ This. While other teams also have a lot of young guys, the two schools referenced are established programs, with an established system, and while not overflowing with upperclassmen, the young players have had older players there to learn from. Last year we had all these guys come in who had never played college ball, they learned not from others, but from their too-frequent failures. Then another group of kids come in, and they have to learn from people who didn't have anybody to learn from. It's been tough but I think next year, we being to reap the benefits from all the failures.
I'm one of the bigger Lavin apologists out there, and while I don't think he is a good in-game coach, I realize he had to jump through a bunch of hoops to get to where we are now, and deserves credit for that. We will have 6 top 100 recruits on the floor next year, who will have had ample time and experience to learn how to compete.