vivid_dude wrote:I'm not a big fan of the attitude fans have toward players who don't choose Creighton. They don't owe us anything. You have no idea what is important to them. You have no idea what is "best fit" for their situation. And you are looking at things from a completely biased perspective of believing with your navy blue heart that Creighton is the best place, when you really have an incomplete picture.
Of course, you can find some examples that you think validates such an opinion, but can you also admit to the opposite? Meaning...players like Kofi Cockburn, Shamorie Ponds, Myles Turner, Devonte Graham, Henry Ellenson, Jalen Brunson, Kevin Huerter, Matt Mooney (grad) etc. - kids who Creighton showed a lot of interest in and offered scholarships - were lucky they didn't pick Creighton because they did so well where they landed? I'm trying to learn the rules of this hypothetical world where space and time have no meaning and everybody is just better off at Creighton. It's narrow-minded "fan talk" to me, and isn't very credible.
To be clear, I think it's okay to believe "from a basketball perspective, I believe Kerwin would have thrived more at Creighton because of our offense." That's not the criticism. It's the snarky, know-it-all, shit-on-the-kid tone. It's thinking you know the whole picture. And re-stating what was stated magnificently above - the "this kid is a program changer...wait, he chose another school...well, enjoy the bench, scrub" vibe.
Best of luck to Kerwin.
I've said it about 4 or 5 players. Enaruna, Walton, Matt McQuaid, Mulder, and I think about another name I can't remember right now. Enaruna didn't play much last year and almost not at all in conference. Mulder played 3.8 mpg and then 10.6 mpg.
McQuaid could have been a starter for 3-4 years for us, but stuck it out at Mich. State and started his senior year with < 20MPG in conference for his first 3 seasons. Decent bench player, but was often just a shooter off the bench.
didn't say it about any of the others on your list. Ponds, for instance was going to get every change to get high usage at St. Johns, he wasn't a shooter who was going to be standing in a corner playing decoy.
The circumstances are basically this - if you don't play a lot above the rim, and you are a shooter, and you go to a top 5-10 blue blood type program, don't be surprised if you end up sitting in a corner waiting for a few shots to come your way while you play decoy. Unlike a lot of programs, Creighton really knows how to integrate a shooter into our offense, not just make them a nice add on for whatever it is the coach really wants to do.