84Cat wrote:
Thanks 84Cat! Bear Down
Moderators: UAdevil, JMarkJohns
84Cat wrote:
Weird caption for that photo. It's JerseyMike, even bangkokwildcat could afford to pick up that check.Merkin wrote:A1RZONA wrote:
Stanimal makes $2.8M this year, so looks like CSM is still the highest paid in the bunch.
Summer League players don't get paid, just $100 per day per diem.
rgdeuce wrote:Yeah, I heard Jersey Mike's sushi is dirt cheap...
I wish we had one more pure point on the roster. But I'm guessing a lot of programs wish the same.gumby wrote:Point guard situation. A Miller misfire? What should be done? Or are we good?
Me, too.Chicat wrote:I wish we had one more pure point on the roster. But I'm guessing a lot of programs wish the same.gumby wrote:Point guard situation. A Miller misfire? What should be done? Or are we good?
Misfire but Im not holding it against him.gumby wrote:Point guard situation. A Miller misfire? What should be done? Or are we good?
To answer your question from the other thread:gumby wrote:Do you think Miller is like you? Can answer in the Miller thread. Would love to hear it. Not seeing failure to bust ass being a function of failing to perform here. I see limitations.rgdeuce wrote:Don't want to speak for others, but I'm sure there are plenty here who are like me - bust your ass and perform, or your ass is sitting on the bench/we will find someone to replace you.
What I see you saying here, and I agree, is that PJC doesn't recognize he is an underdog. He plays like a star, which he was a level ago, but he seems oblivious to the fact that he should have a chip on his shoulder. And that is not helped by a lack of someone to push him and show him just how limited he is and why he needs to get every ounce out of what he has.rgdeuce wrote:
I think Miller is 100 percent like me . Blue-collar, get your ass out of bed, be on time and put in your hard 8 at work and go home type of guy. Most seasons though, he has just been handcuffed by taking over an almost depleted program, having crippling injuries and depth problems as a result, and not having depth because of early entries/transfers/turnover, etc. We all remember the "You, get the F out" to Parrom. In Miller's ideal world, he has "next man up" on the bench. It's just that most seasons, next man up is a liability or a walk on. That doesn't work with every player, but it can be very effective with most athletes - if you got that system in place, those are the guys you tend to target and fill around your Stanley's, Gordon's, etc. Like me, he appreciates his upperclassmen and loyalty, maybe to a fault. Last year I was the first to defend Gabe on here, and admittedly, Gabe was given too much of a leash by Miller. I share Miller's temper and intensity too.
I dont think PJC's biggest issue is effort. I wasn't trying to insinuate that it was more of an "either one of these will have your ass on the bench ". I'd actually place it third behind his physical limitations. With that said, he is a guy who can go through the motions quite a bit; and he seems to be a guy who is perfectly content with sitting in a heated restaurant and enjoying his 6-ounce steak, rather than wanting the guy who will go outside in the snow, hunt for his own meat and be able to eat as much as he could and have leftovers for days (TJ). If he was that guy, his limitations would be greatly mitigated by being a blood-thirsty in your pocket ball pest and the short quick guy who sneaks into the heart of the defense and finds his way out with an assist. But he isn't that type of player and that is fine, you either have that or you dont and I dont fault him or anyone else for not being that because those are special players.
I think his biggest problem, 100 percent is his mental makeup. He does not have the mental makeup to be the starting point guard for a top-tier Division1 program, IMO. It's a big responsibility, I just see him as the guy who is better suited to play the background and be the supporting role player. If he was 6'3, it would not be as noticeable. If he had the heart of a TJ or Muggsy Bogues, it would not be a problem. And maybe that is what Miller thought he was getting? He was out there watching him and he saw what he thought was a short guy who was a giant slayer, not knowing there was a ceiling on his giant slaying. You can be impressed with a 5'6 150 guy who doesn't back down from a fight against a 5'11 200 (High School) guy and say, man, that guy is fearless, and assume he would fight a 6'2 guy built like Karl Malone (College). Some of those guys don't have limits, and some are crazy enough to fight someone built like Lebron. It's a risk, and I'm sure a lesson that Miller learned.
it would even be nice to have justin simon around. he'd probably be earning the minutes at pg that he wanted right now, and would be a nice defensive complement to PJC against the likes of ucla, gonzaga, udub, cal. oh well.Chicat wrote:I wish we had one more pure point on the roster. But I'm guessing a lot of programs wish the same.gumby wrote:Point guard situation. A Miller misfire? What should be done? Or are we good?
LOL, nah. Actually quite the contrary. More like he recognizes he is an underdog and mentally, he does not think he is capable of being the man who runs the show at an elite D1 program. Like rather than Miller saying, the keys are yours and he is jumping up and down and eager to show the world, he is like, oh, cool, and in his head he is constantly thinking, am I good enough? I could be wrong, but that's my educated guess based on watching him in his time here. He is not a bad player by any means, but to me, when you are Arizona bench good and your head is telling you that you are Arizona bench good, you are going to be Arizona bench good. Same player, but with a starter's mentality, said player is going to be a lot better. I mean, think about it. Last year Miller was saying, PJC is our guy. And he basically crapped the bed over an extended period. He's done better earlier this year, but he is teetering on looking like he is going to have a miserable shooting start (made a couple to at least retain some confidence for the time being). He has shown flashes of what he is capable of, but frequently goes through these lulls.EVCat wrote:
What I see you saying here, and I agree, is that PJC doesn't recognize he is an underdog. He plays like a star, which he was a level ago, but he seems oblivious to the fact that he should have a chip on his shoulder. And that is not helped by a lack of someone to push him and show him just how limited he is and why he needs to get every ounce out of what he has.
I see some of the same, but I see a kid so eager to prove he is capable he drives the car off the cliff occasionally. And while a superstar would just say "oh well...I got it next time", I think the failures eat at PJC. I think we are saying the same thing...he has nagging doubts about his own ability. He can be told "this is your team", but until he strings together multiple good games, he is going to have that creeping self doubt.rgdeuce wrote:LOL, nah. Actually quite the contrary. More like he recognizes he is an underdog and mentally, he does not think he is capable of being the man who runs the show at an elite D1 program. Like rather than Miller saying, the keys are yours and he is jumping up and down and eager to show the world, he is like, oh, cool, and in his head he is constantly thinking, am I good enough? I could be wrong, but that's my educated guess based on watching him in his time here. He is not a bad player by any means, but to me, when you are Arizona bench good and your head is telling you that you are Arizona bench good, you are going to be Arizona bench good. Same player, but with a starter's mentality, said player is going to be a lot better. I mean, think about it. Last year Miller was saying, PJC is our guy. And he basically crapped the bed over an extended period. He's done better earlier this year, but he is teetering on looking like he is going to have a miserable shooting start (made a couple to at least retain some confidence for the time being). He has shown flashes of what he is capable of, but frequently goes through these lulls.EVCat wrote:
What I see you saying here, and I agree, is that PJC doesn't recognize he is an underdog. He plays like a star, which he was a level ago, but he seems oblivious to the fact that he should have a chip on his shoulder. And that is not helped by a lack of someone to push him and show him just how limited he is and why he needs to get every ounce out of what he has.
I think the best thing PJC can do right now is ride that Lauri train and really focus on the pick and roll and pop with him. When TJ got to Philly, he went straight for Okafor to build that rapport and worked extra hard to get that two-man game going.
Thanks, Hi! Loved the discussion.HiCat wrote:Miller discusses Arizona's ideal recruit, breaks down signee DeAndre Ayton
Updated 13 hrs ago
http://tucson.com/online/video/watch-mi ... c8b47.html" target="_blank
I agree on Parker, but I'm not holding it against him.Jefe wrote:Misfire but Im not holding it against him.gumby wrote:Point guard situation. A Miller misfire? What should be done? Or are we good?
We wouldn't be having this conversation if PJC could make 2 threes every single night
Miller hasn't been able to consistently recruit the position. T.J. was the exception.Olsondogg wrote:The real question is, has anyone ever been happy with a PG under Miller? I mean, in hindsight (which is always clear of course) everyone loves TJ, but they didn't during his playing days. Even in his senior year OOC, people were questioning him and his abilities.
Before him it was Lyons, and Josiah Turner (remember the acclaim on TOS about his arrival...I do)...before that Momo Jones...
PJC is what he is. Did he have a bad year last year? Absolutely. I don't fault Miller for putting his faith in PJC based on how he sees him perform daily. People act like good/great PG's grow on trees and are available wherever and whenever...yet probably couldn't name more than a couple.
To talk on Gumby's second topic. Yes. Every year needs a whipping boy. PJC and Ristic are the frontrunners for this job this year. I predict both will have better years than what most on here are expecting.
How has Miller shown that it's a lesson learned?rgdeuce wrote:To answer your question from the other thread:gumby wrote:Do you think Miller is like you? Can answer in the Miller thread. Would love to hear it. Not seeing failure to bust ass being a function of failing to perform here. I see limitations.rgdeuce wrote:Don't want to speak for others, but I'm sure there are plenty here who are like me - bust your ass and perform, or your ass is sitting on the bench/we will find someone to replace you.
I think Miller is 100 percent like me . Blue-collar, get your ass out of bed, be on time and put in your hard 8 at work and go home type of guy. Most seasons though, he has just been handcuffed by taking over an almost depleted program, having crippling injuries and depth problems as a result, and not having depth because of early entries/transfers/turnover, etc. We all remember the "You, get the F out" to Parrom. In Miller's ideal world, he has "next man up" on the bench. It's just that most seasons, next man up is a liability or a walk on. That doesn't work with every player, but it can be very effective with most athletes - if you got that system in place, those are the guys you tend to target and fill around your Stanley's, Gordon's, etc. Like me, he appreciates his upperclassmen and loyalty, maybe to a fault. Last year I was the first to defend Gabe on here, and admittedly, Gabe was given too much of a leash by Miller. I share Miller's temper and intensity too.
I dont think PJC's biggest issue is effort. I wasn't trying to insinuate that it was more of an "either one of these will have your ass on the bench ". I'd actually place it third behind his physical limitations. With that said, he is a guy who can go through the motions quite a bit; and he seems to be a guy who is perfectly content with sitting in a heated restaurant and enjoying his 6-ounce steak, rather than wanting the guy who will go outside in the snow, hunt for his own meat and be able to eat as much as he could and have leftovers for days (TJ). If he was that guy, his limitations would be greatly mitigated by being a blood-thirsty in your pocket ball pest and the short quick guy who sneaks into the heart of the defense and finds his way out with an assist. But he isn't that type of player and that is fine, you either have that or you dont and I dont fault him or anyone else for not being that because those are special players.
I think his biggest problem, 100 percent is his mental makeup. He does not have the mental makeup to be the starting point guard for a top-tier Division1 program, IMO. It's a big responsibility, I just see him as the guy who is better suited to play the background and be the supporting role player. If he was 6'3, it would not be as noticeable. If he had the heart of a TJ or Muggsy Bogues, it would not be a problem. And maybe that is what Miller thought he was getting? He was out there watching him and he saw what he thought was a short guy who was a giant slayer, not knowing there was a ceiling on his giant slaying. You can be impressed with a 5'6 150 guy who doesn't back down from a fight against a 5'11 200 (High School) guy and say, man, that guy is fearless, and assume he would fight a 6'2 guy built like Karl Malone (College). Some of those guys don't have limits, and some are crazy enough to fight someone built like Lebron. It's a risk, and I'm sure a lesson that Miller learned.
Small sample size, but for one, it doesn't seem like he is worried about recruiting over anyone else anymore. I know that doesnt translate to our point guard/PJC situation now, but I think if Kobi was able to take that role it would have been different. He's just not right now. And for whatever reason, we've been nailing the wings and up with Miller but PG recruiting has always been shaky. Which is weird to me given who Miller is. The second, will take longer to play out, but I doubt Miller will ever go hard for a very undersized point guard unless he is a sure thing and he will probably not put all his eggs in that one basket if it does happen.gumby wrote: How has Miller shown that it's a lesson learned?
Some of that is PGs are tough to find. There aren't that many who are clear high level D1 translations (TJ was a revelation...not a single one of us, TJ and Miller included, knew what he was going to be, even though they say they did). Lots of scoring 1s and athletes. Then you get someone like a Derryk Thornton that looked like a sure-fire bet (and may still be)...I mean, I seriously couldn't tell what hand that kid favored even when he was a sophomore. I had a player crush on him much like 97Cats. Yet he flamed out at Duke. Maybe he went too early and hurt himself by reclassifying. Maybe the talent there is so over the top. But it would seem a true PG with skills would only be like a kid in a candy shop with options like he had there.rgdeuce wrote:Small sample size, but for one, it doesn't seem like he is worried about recruiting over anyone else anymore. I know that doesnt translate to our point guard/PJC situation now, but I think if Kobi was able to take that role it would have been different. He's just not right now. And for whatever reason, we've been nailing the wings and up with Miller but PG recruiting has always been shaky. Which is weird to me given who Miller is. The second, will take longer to play out, but I doubt Miller will ever go hard for a very undersized point guard unless he is a sure thing and he will probably not put all his eggs in that one basket if it does happen.gumby wrote: How has Miller shown that it's a lesson learned?
This statement doesn't actually make any sense. He wasn't consistently recruiting...but along came TJ and then he was?gumby wrote:Miller hasn't been able to consistently recruit the position. T.J. was the exception.Olsondogg wrote:The real question is, has anyone ever been happy with a PG under Miller? I mean, in hindsight (which is always clear of course) everyone loves TJ, but they didn't during his playing days. Even in his senior year OOC, people were questioning him and his abilities.
Before him it was Lyons, and Josiah Turner (remember the acclaim on TOS about his arrival...I do)...before that Momo Jones...
PJC is what he is. Did he have a bad year last year? Absolutely. I don't fault Miller for putting his faith in PJC based on how he sees him perform daily. People act like good/great PG's grow on trees and are available wherever and whenever...yet probably couldn't name more than a couple.
To talk on Gumby's second topic. Yes. Every year needs a whipping boy. PJC and Ristic are the frontrunners for this job this year. I predict both will have better years than what most on here are expecting.
That is worth noting, too. Which is odd for "Point Guard U", which has really become an antiquated moniker. We are Wing U. And you would think TJ's being in the league at all would be an amazing commercial for playing point at UA.rgdeuce wrote:I get all that, but outside of Josiah Turner (who ended up being a bust, go figure), we just havent gotten that big recruit yet when he was landed Aytons, Stanleys, Zeuses, Gordons, etc. Eight top 20 guys from the 2012 class and on, not a single one was a point guard. Obviously Simon (34) and Kobi (28) were inside the top 50, but if Simon wasnt a combo guard he was a long-term project to even play the position and Kobi was seen as a combo. PJC was our best success for "youre getting a point guard day 1" in that time frame, he was ranked 50th. Add to the fact that Miller was an outstanding collegiate point guard, one of the three best recruiters in the country and one of the best coaches period....
Well...he had the munchies...Chicat wrote: Josiah Turner certainly did not have that hunger.
Totally agree with your analysis, Chi. Your last sentence says it all.Chicat wrote:I also think that at PG it's most important to Miller that the player have a hunger to win that is not surpassed on the team. Josiah Turner certainly did not have that hunger. All of his other point guards however have had it. So maybe there are more naturally talented guys out there that Miller doesn't go after hard knowing that he needs an absolute pitbull in the backcourt just like he was.
That's an interesting take. I mean, it has to be something. I cant think of any other way to explain things. And maybe the Josiah recruitment "changed" his approach on what PGs he likes to go after. Historically though, if you look at our classes under Miller, more years than not we aren't adding a PG period.dirtbags wrote:not to be obtuse, but i just figured that CSM feels a lot more comfortable recruiting, developing, and taking a more raw pg under his wing -- relative to, say a big guy who he will want to come in a bit more game-ready. i mean, even TJ was a bit of a project when he transferred.
landing the nation's best point guard is always a goal, but it just seems that as a former pg Miller is fine with taking a chance on a kid with a high ceiling and coaching him up. nothing wrong with that.
So, this is a rough, rough statistical analysis, but...looking at the last 4 years of top ranked PG's, there are really only 2-3 guys who make a significant impact as frosh in each class. This is obviously dependent on my definition of significant impact.dirtbags wrote:not to be obtuse, but i just figured that CSM feels a lot more comfortable recruiting, developing, and taking a more raw pg under his wing -- relative to, say a big guy who he will want to come in a bit more game-ready. i mean, even TJ was a bit of a project when he transferred.
landing the nation's best point guard is always a goal, but it just seems that as a former pg Miller is fine with taking a chance on a kid with a high ceiling and coaching him up. nothing wrong with that.
So with the Turner situation, a top guy that didnt pan out, maybe he backs down from going all-in on a 5 star point w his resources and thinks those resources are better allocated to wings/4s. And instead of snagging up the more "sure thing but down the road" PG's in the 30s-60s, he is going after the "projects/combos" in those ranges that have a chance to be better than the top 20 guys down the road... High risk/high reward type of situation?Spaceman Spiff wrote:So, this is a rough, rough statistical analysis, but...looking at the last 4 years of top ranked PG's, there are really only 2-3 guys who make a significant impact as frosh in each class. This is obviously dependent on my definition of significant impact.dirtbags wrote:not to be obtuse, but i just figured that CSM feels a lot more comfortable recruiting, developing, and taking a more raw pg under his wing -- relative to, say a big guy who he will want to come in a bit more game-ready. i mean, even TJ was a bit of a project when he transferred.
landing the nation's best point guard is always a goal, but it just seems that as a former pg Miller is fine with taking a chance on a kid with a high ceiling and coaching him up. nothing wrong with that.
That said, I would say it squares with what I tend to think. PG is the hardest position to have an immediate impact guy. Most prospects tend to take time and be more hit or miss.
Partially, it's the limits of the position. Even if a 6'10 guy doesn't develop well, he's still 6'10. A PG, well, that player needs to make the skill transition, or he won't do much.
"Consistent" means just that. Not understanding the confusion.Olsondogg wrote:This statement doesn't actually make any sense. He wasn't consistently recruiting...but along came TJ and then he was?gumby wrote:Miller hasn't been able to consistently recruit the position. T.J. was the exception.Olsondogg wrote:The real question is, has anyone ever been happy with a PG under Miller? I mean, in hindsight (which is always clear of course) everyone loves TJ, but they didn't during his playing days. Even in his senior year OOC, people were questioning him and his abilities.
Before him it was Lyons, and Josiah Turner (remember the acclaim on TOS about his arrival...I do)...before that Momo Jones...
PJC is what he is. Did he have a bad year last year? Absolutely. I don't fault Miller for putting his faith in PJC based on how he sees him perform daily. People act like good/great PG's grow on trees and are available wherever and whenever...yet probably couldn't name more than a couple.
To talk on Gumby's second topic. Yes. Every year needs a whipping boy. PJC and Ristic are the frontrunners for this job this year. I predict both will have better years than what most on here are expecting.
Also based on what metric of success? Getting to the NBA? Getting to an Elite 8? Cause the team with Momo at point did that.
I just don't understand what metric of success people are looking for. People want players to be the best at their position in the nation at every position? POY's for everyone? People want regular season success so that the season is enjoyable? People want players to be in the NBA, and then successful in the NBA?
Or all of it. People want players who are the best at their position, best in the league, leading to dominance in the NCAA and then dominance in the NBA. And in the end, Miller is responsible for all that cause he watches these players in HS and should convince them to come, and convince them to perform the way that we all expect them to.
Got it.
AG and RHJ, that class was a rare mix of two very talented guys who are also extremely hard workers and unselfish, team first, defensive oriented players.dirtbags wrote:RHJ was another who totally fit the mold... loved being in tucson, loved the UofA, loved the fans, played & practiced hard, team guy, didn't care if he started, repped the program well, had just the right amount of nastiness. (bonus: PA guy)
Simple...we play the other teams offensive game without thinking about it...how many times in the first half last night did we get the ball into our bigs?dcZONAfan wrote:Ummmmmm.... Wut?
The only issue with your theory is that about 80%+ of our offensive possessions are called plays by CSM. As far as scoring average, you have to look at pace of play. If our defense is on and we're forcing teams to go deep into their shot clock, that will lead to less offensive possessions for us as well.CatFanOneMil wrote:Simple...we play the other teams offensive game without thinking about it...how many times in the first half last night did we get the ball into our bigs?dcZONAfan wrote:Ummmmmm.... Wut?
Not many. But that is our game right now based on our advantage.
We are playing down to their level offensively...
Think about it, our score should never be a reflection of the other teams typical scoring average, but it almost always is...
I'm suggesting its unconscious...CSM can call whatever play he wants, but our offense will look sluggish because it will "feel" unnatural...Chicat wrote:The only issue with your theory is that about 80%+ of our offensive possessions are called plays by CSM. As far as scoring average, you have to look at pace of play. If our defense is on and we're forcing teams to go deep into their shot clock, that will lead to less offensive possessions for us as well.CatFanOneMil wrote:Simple...we play the other teams offensive game without thinking about it...how many times in the first half last night did we get the ball into our bigs?dcZONAfan wrote:Ummmmmm.... Wut?
Not many. But that is our game right now based on our advantage.
We are playing down to their level offensively...
Think about it, our score should never be a reflection of the other teams typical scoring average, but it almost always is...