Basketball is not about a collection of talented players...it is about how you play together. Looking at Sampson's stats 13 ppg on 49.5% from the field, looks like he was an efficient player. That doesn't tell the whole story. Sampson killed chemistry with inopportune turnovers, missed FTs (56% from the line), being unclutch, taking jumpers with no consideration of the shot clock, score, situation, etc. How many offensive goaltendings did he have
I'll take a stab at this one. How many offensive goaltending did he have? Was it two? Three? Seven hundred? Question: are you the same Marillac who posted daily in the off season about what a horrible offensive rebounder Dom Pointer was, complete with charts, graphs, and video telestration? And yet here, Jakarr Sampson - who in Marillac's expert opinion has no shot of ever playing in the NBA, ever - was allegedly too aggressive an offensive rebounder. Well. Evidently the perfect small forward for Marillac would be Goldilocks. This Dom Pointer is too cold. This Jakarr Sampson is too hot. But this offensive rebounder is just right. Here's the thing. Your thesis - and the other guy, who rips Jakarr Sampson and describes Christian Jones as "productive - is silly. It's a classic example of the fallacy post hoc ergo propter hoc: it postulates causation from coincidence. There are any number of reasons why this years team is better than last years: the players are all seniors, just like the other team Lavin had success with; Chris Obekpa has transformed himself from a one dimensional player to a force in the middle; Phil Greene has (for the time being anyway) stopped clanking his shot off the front rim; Dom Pointer has become a wrecking ball; the freshman PG is a sophomore - no less an authority than Marillac says the the biggest improvement in BB is between freshman and sophomore year; Lavin is coaching for a contract and so has kept the beclownment to a minimum; Whitesell's system has been in place for a year. All these things are different, which differences you ignore. And what is silliest about all of that is that it takes all those changes as givens and leaves Jakarr Sampson - who evidently worked his balls off after he left school to become a better basketball player - frozen in amber like a prehistoric bug. All those changes are ignored and the possibility that Jakarr Sampson would not change is assumed. Sampson and Pointer handed the game to Syracuse last season like Jordan tried to do this year. I have no doubt in my mind we lose to Syracuse this year if Sampson was on the roster.
The roster difference that made a difference between last year and this belongs to Syracuse's: last year Fair, Ennis, and Jeremi Grant scored 56 of SU's 68 points. This year they scored none - because they're playing professional basketball. I went back and looked at the box score of last year's Syracuse game, which evidently Jakarr Sampson lost single-handedly. In that game Jakarr Sampson had his usual 12 points (6 of 10) and 6 rebounds. Saint John's guards OTOH shot 9 of 33 from the floor - that's 27 percent - and 1 for 11 from three - that's .09 percent. Question: can you explain the physics behind the vacuum in which you analyzed those statistics to determine that Jakarr Sampson gave that game away? Thanks in advance.
Sampson doesn't seem like a guy you would be high on. He was probably the best athlete in the country last season--top five at worst--but he is was mistake prone and didn't have a clutch bone in his body. He had no chance at SJU with the other mistake-prone personnel and no true wing and center to let him do what he does best. He also had a bimbo head coach that doesn't understand that not ever talented player should be given free reign to play like Baron Davis, Dwight Hardy, and Justin Brownlee. He didn't have the skill set or the decision-making ability to carry that kind of responsibility last season. Sampson did not play within his game. This is how how he and Sanchez ended the Syracuse game:
5:48 - Sanchez misses FT (SJU 60-58)
3:19 - Sampson misses jumper, Harrison gets rebound misses shot, Sampson rebounds and is fouled
3:14 - Sampson misses TWO FTs (Syracuse ahead 62-60)
3:00 - CJ Fair nails open jumper because Sampson strayed too far (Syracuse up 64-60)
1:41 - CJ Fair nails another open jumper after Harrison makes 1/2 from line (Syracuse up 66-61)
1:21 - Sampson turnover out of time out
:44 - Sanchez turns ball over
:41 - Dom fouls Ennis who makes two FTS (Syracuse 68-61)
:33 - Sampson missed layup
CJ Fair didn't exactly have a great game (21 pts, 4 turnovers, 3-7 from the line) but he came up huge when it counted. Those are the exact moments Sampson and Pointer disappeared. Sanchez and Jordan just added to the mistake ball. Sampson didn't score a point the last 13:24 of the game while CJ Fair scored 10.