Seems to me his best chance of getting PT and being a relevant contributor are with Nebraska.Cuz Husker Hoops SUCK.
Seems to me his best chance of getting PT and being a relevant contributor are with Nebraska.Cuz Husker Hoops SUCK.
I know others have said it too, but to me you're really only losing 3 as Fuller doesn't really count since he had no game impact in the 4 years he was here (not saying I don't appreciate his efforts and what I'm sure was hard work in practice, but otherwise nothing to show for it).
And agree with the sum of the parts comment. Jacobsen and Morrow are both tweeners, who on their own aren't very good individual players. Neither quite big enough to hack it down low, but neither with much shooting ability either. Both would be pretty decent bench guys I think, but I don't think either should have been starting in the B1G. Horne to me had the most upside due to his shooting, as this team needs shooting, but I'm hopeful Gill, Copeland, and Palmer can help fill those shoes.
I understand its quite unnerving to see 1 starter graduate and two more say they want to transfer, but I don't quite feel the wheels are completely falling off because of the transfers that we have brought in so far that I mentioned above. If Watson or Roby goes, then that changes things completely.
But having Watson, Taylor, Palmer, Gill, McVeigh, Copeland, Roby, and Jordy (and Nana?) still gives us a decent nucleus it would appear. This is the point where it would be nice if we could have held on to one of either Morrow or Jacobsen as they could have come off the bench behind Jordy. As of now, we'll definitely need another big. But if Copeland is all he's cracked up to be, he's probably starting at the 4, and where does that leave either Morrow or Jacobsen besides coming off the bench?
Miles also needs to maybe do a little better at retention. Barfy tries to provide cover by saying nationally 40% leave. But NU is at 58%. Obviously with small numbers the %s change quickly but still...batting 6 out of 14 is awful for many reasons.
Every player comes in thinking they will be all big 10. Seems he's failing at developing a team first atmosphere where guys accept roles. I guess that's a hell of a lot easier to do on a team that makes the dance v a team that wins 5 conference games.
He's a relatively big kid with decent skills and athleticism who was able to give a lot of minutes play a lot of front court positions for us. We'll miss him in a big way.Beyond the disappointment in seeing so many of our core players leaving, is reading some of the really uneducated or unflattering comments being made about someone like Jacobson. Things like 'he's not that much of a loss', 'not a big impact player', are just ridiculous.
First, a guy doesn't have to be a big scorer, to be a key contributor. And make no mistake, Jake could have been a 10-7 guy, no problem. He plays pretty good D, he sets decent picks, he actually has a pretty good stroke (I don't consider him streaky when he doesn't get consistent looks), and he was quick to try to bring guys together after the White issue.
Jacobson is exactly the kind of guy we usually complain we didn't go after. Local talent, that can be a great role player that blends well with other players. In the right system, he'd have the opportunity to contribute, and I see his departure as a definite loss. If he doesn't do that much after the transfer, it won't mean he wasn't talented or wouldn't have contributed to the Huskers. Showing up as a transfer means you better get in the flow quickly, because those years of growth (freshman, redshirt or soph) are behind you, and becoming cohesive with the new team needs to happen in only a few months. Not easy.
He's a relatively big kid with decent skills and athleticism who was able to give a lot of minutes play a lot of front court positions for us. We'll miss him in a big way.
Yep. Nobody would argue that he's Terrence Badgett or Vinson Hamilton but, by NU basketball standards, he was a solid player. The kind of kid you'd just as soon have on your team.And few could argue he was dedicated to improve physically. The kid really hit the weights since his freshman year.
I think morrow is probably the only one that sees a pro career for himself...obviously he won't be playing in the NBA but he has a chance to make money somewhere.Yep. It doesn't take long to fan the flames of "in the right offense, I'd be scoring 25 a night", and I'm guessing 2-3 of the guys leaving have a bit of that in the back of their minds.
Well put.Beyond the disappointment in seeing so many of our core players leaving, is reading some of the really uneducated or unflattering comments being made about someone like Jacobson. Things like 'he's not that much of a loss', 'not a big impact player', are just ridiculous.
First, a guy doesn't have to be a big scorer, to be a key contributor. And make no mistake, Jake could have been a 10-7 guy, no problem. He plays pretty good D, he sets decent picks, he actually has a pretty good stroke (I don't consider him streaky when he doesn't get consistent looks), and he was quick to try to bring guys together after the White issue.
Jacobson is exactly the kind of guy we usually complain we didn't go after. Local talent, that can be a great role player that blends well with other players. In the right system, he'd have the opportunity to contribute, and I see his departure as a definite loss. If he doesn't do that much after the transfer, it won't mean he wasn't talented or wouldn't have contributed to the Huskers. Showing up as a transfer means you better get in the flow quickly, because those years of growth (freshman, redshirt or soph) are behind you, and becoming cohesive with the new team needs to happen in only a few months. Not easy.
Warden Samuel Norton: No more protection from the guards. I'll pull you out of that one-bunk Hilton and cast you down with the sodomites. You'll think you got f***** by a train! And thelibraryHuskers BB? Gone! Sealed off brick by brick! We'll have us a little book-barbecue in the yard! They'll see the flames for Miles! We'll dance around it like wild Indians! Do you understand me? Are you catching my drift? Or am I being obtuse?
Well put.
Outside of the Kentucky and North Carolinas of the NCAA world most good teams have several guys who fill a role...or more accurately MOST of the guys on any team are role players. Hell, even the kid from UNC that beat Kentucky only plays 14 minutes a game and scores 5 points. He's a former 4* recruit that could probably go just about anywhere as a transfer. That kind of goes to my previous point though...probably easier to accept a "role" for a winner.
I don't think Jacobson is likely under any illusion that he's going to go somewhere and be a focal point. Every team needs guys like Jacobson. Certainly every team can make use of a Morrow but I imagine only the most desparate of teams will tell him he's going to be a focal point of their offense. I'd love to get in Horne's head and know what his true reasons are. He had a decent final 6 (DePaul, KSU, ISU, NU, Wichita and pepperdine) so I'm sure he'll end up somewhere decent. He got minutes as a frosh, didn't light it up but didn't shoot poorly...not relative to his teammates anyway. Fuller is truly no loss. I'd be surprised if the decision was 100% his. He should have probably been pushed out the door last year. But yeah...this idea that was being sold HARD on HHC from a couple guys that these guys are no big loss individually or collectively is delusional.
Yep. Nobody would argue that he's Terrence Badgett or Vinson Hamilton but, by NU basketball standards, he was a solid player. The kind of kid you'd just as soon have on your team.
I think morrow is probably the only one that sees a pro career for himself...obviously he won't be playing in the NBA but he has a chance to make money somewhere.