Dukes2012 wrote:
While I would love to see a 6'10" to 7' center, you run a big risk recruiting such a player because there are only a handful of talented, ready to play big men each year, and the top programs gobble them all up. Thus, any player in that height range would be a project and require lots of coaching and time (i.e. D. Lewis). It's unlikely such a player could help us right away.
While I agree with everything your saying, it's risky, could be a project, not provide an impact right away, I feel it's still the way to go because of what we already have.
With the addition of wheeler the guard position is basically an embarrassment of riches, and I can think of a number of guys off the top of my head who can play the 3 over the next couple years (James, walker, Mike, and littleson when they want to go small) and then the 5 guys I mentioned who can play the 4 and 5, but are more tradtitional 4s.
We have every essential piece you need for a roster locked up at the moment. That is why I think the risk is worth taking on a luxury piece like really tall true center even if your return on investment takes a little longer to come to fruition. I would go after a really tall guy who possesses some skill but is really skinny, or a really tall guy with some skill who is heavy. These are the type of guys that fall to programs like us, and can be developed.
A perfect example of this is Umass's Rashaan Holloway. 6'11", was like 350 coming out of high school. Really soft hands and quick feet. Played sparingly as a freshman but looked good. His offer sheet looked like the average guy we recruit, no BCS offers. Now he's a sophomore, down to 310, and is having a big impact on the team so far this year. Imagine him as a senior, he'll be a force.
Plus even before a kid like that is really developed, he can still be useful for winning tipoffs and guarding a guy if your playing a team with huge size like we saw with Abele and early d Lewis.