This city is famous for overhyping basketball players. Not just St.John's, but all of them. How many basketball players in NYC have actually liked up to the hype over the last 25 years?
Mashburn? Marbury? Walker? Almost all of them wind up playing in the league as role players like Lamar Odom and Sebastian Telfair, or disappear into the night like Lenny Cooke. There are different reasons why a guy like Lopez couldn't hack it here. IMO, in addition to the terrible leadership, and coaching, he cracked under the pressure, and played nervous most of his time here.
Jordan may a completely different type of kid, and player, but what on earth do we have to gain with hype? If he shows up today, and he looks like a stud, then great, but shouldn't we want the hype to build gradually? I love Lavin, but his best skill so far is hype, and in year 4, it's now time for some substance.
I recall the 94-95 season w vivid accuracy. Lopez graced the cover of the USA Today Magazine, SI, The Sporting News, and he was featured in the NYDN, NYP, The NYT and several other publications during a time when just about everyone has no idea what kind of player he really was, because they hadn't seen more than his photo.
On the other hand, a year earlier, Uconn, which featured Donyell Marshall and Doron Shaeffer, brought some no name freshman off the bench. They gave him freshman minutes, and brought him along slowly. Jim Calhoun's development of Ray Allen is what I'd like to strive for. I don't care how good a freshman thinks he is, or even how good he really is, I'd like to see all of them wait turn. It seems to have worked out pretty well for Calhoun.