UCLA guard Aaron Holiday had a good sophomore season. Can he take a leap as a junior?
Frank Mason enrolled at Kansas as a speedster with an inconsistent jumper. By his senior year, he shot 47 percent from 3 and won the Naismith.
This offseason, players all over the country have been spending hours in the gym honing skills and learning others. Offseason development is crucial to a player's progress and to a programās success.
With that in mind, here are six players who are an improved skill away from reaching new heights:
*Theo Pinson, North Carolina
Skill needed: Shooting
Pinson does almost everything on a basketball court. Labeling him merely as a glue guy would be an insult to his athleticism.
Pinson was the perfect puzzle piece to slide between Joel Berry and Justin Jackson, both of whom became elite shooters as juniors. They allowed Pinson to do what he does best: attack closeouts, slither across the baseline for putbacks and dump-offs, and cut to the hoop like a mad man. Pinson does everything 100 mph. Thatās especially important on defense. Pinson brings a blue-collar mentality to a UNC program that has lacked toughness in the past.
While Pinson covered up for the weaknesses of Berry and Jackson, they did the same for him. Pinson is a career 27 percent 3-point shooter and made a career-low 24 percent as a junior. He wonāt be expected to fill Jacksonās offensive role alone. But for the Tar Heels to sniff a repeat run, Pinson is going to need to help bridge the gap. Shoot 33 percent or so from distance, and thatās huge. He does everything else so well.
It wonāt happen with Berry in the mix, but Pinson could run a team at a high level if necessary. He averaged 3.7 assists as an off guard. He also averaged 4.6 rebounds, which is impressive for any wing. But itās particularly noteworthy to do so on North Carolina, which features a massive front line. His defense, of course, is pristine.
He shot 70 percent from the free-throw line last year, a career high. If he can make similar progress behind the arc, the Tar Heels will be the big beneficiaries.
*Vince Edwards, Purdue
Skill needed: Slashing
Moving Edwards to the four and breaking up the Isaac Haas-Caleb Swanigan jumbo package worked wonders for Purdue's offense last season. Edwards shot a sizzling 42 percent from 3 and was versatile defensively. He can hang with the big boys and can switch onto eager guards looking to exploit a mismatch. At 6-foot-8, 225 pounds, heās useful in any situation.
āItās a lot more responsibility,ā Edwards told krikyacasino.com of the position switch. āYou have to be able to guard positions one through four, sometimes even the five. But I think it fits me better as a player. You have to be able to go out there and do a little bit of everything, and that suits my game well.ā
The proof was in Purdueās win totals. Yes, Swaniganās improvement had plenty to do with this, but Purdue won more games with a Swanigan-Edwards front line than an A.J. Hammons-Swanigan frontcourt the year prior. Oh, and Hammons was awesome. He averaged 24 points and 13 boards per 40 minutes as a senior. But the fit with Biggie was clunky.
Still, Edwards can improve this year. Heās more athletic than most of the power forwards who guard him, so he can capitalize on that mismatch more often. Step 1 of playing the small-ball four is to be a great shooter. He is that. Step 2 is to use your athleticism to penetrate and make plays for others.
Weāll see if Edwards has that in his bag. A whopping 76 percent of his scoring came from 3-point range as a junior. He averaged 12.6 points a game, but throw a couple of drives in there, and he could average 16. With Swanigan gone, heāll have more chances.
*KeVaughn Allen, Florida
Skill needed: Playmaking
The closest thing to Malik Monk in the SEC last year, Allen is a microwave. He led the Gators in scoring on 37 percent 3-point shooting. His offensive outbursts were memorable. Allen hung 35 on Wisconsin in the Sweet 16. He scored 26 against South Carolina on seven shot attempts. Allen is a modern scorer, doing most of his damage behind the 3-point arc and at the free-throw line.
He plays a different style than his teammates, which is good. Florida is disciplined, but could stand to take more risks. Thatās Allenās role. Heās an efficient gunner, which is rare. Considering the degree of difficulty, itās a miracle Allen made almost 40 percent of his 3s.
The next step is creating offense for others. Allen had only seven more assists than turnovers (53 to 46). He has the jets to get to the rim at will, but heās predictable upon arrival. Defenses can collapse because heās likely not dishing to a teammate. At 6-foot-2, that makes finishing over length even harder.
In his defense, Allen was playing with two solid point guards last year in Kasey Hill and Chris Chiozza. Hill is gone, so Allen will have more playmaking opportunities.
Perhaps Allen was simply doing what he was told last season, focusing on scoring. But Florida will need more diversity from him as a junior. If heās up to the task, the Gators will be formidable once again.
*Aaron Holiday, UCLA
Skill needed: Ball-handling
Lonzo Ball received the bulk of the UCLA headlines last year. He was an incredible player. Once that was acknowledged, weād say, āDonāt forget T.J. Leaf and Bryce Alford. They're awesome, too.ā
All true. Holiday also belonged in that discussion.
The younger brother of the NBA's Jrue and Justin Holiday was an efficiency monster as a sophomore, shooting 41 percent from 3 and 54 percent from 2. His true shooting percentage was 61. With Ball and Alford gone, Holiday will be the Bruinsā primary offensive creator. Is he up to the task?
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His assist numbers have been solid. He averaged four as a freshman and 4.4 as a sophomore. But Holiday sometimes has been careless with the ball. He led UCLA in turnovers two years ago and finished .1 behind Ball last season. Considering how much more Ball ran the offense than Holiday, thatās worrisome.
Holiday is a high-level shooter and passer. He has a ton of skills. If he can become a killer pick-and-roll guard who doesnāt waste possessions, UCLA will be better than people think.
*Ben Lammers, Georgia Tech
Skill needed: 3-point shooting
Georgia Tech is fascinating. No team had a bigger difference between its offense and defense last season. The Yellow Jackets finished 259th on O and sixth on D.
Lammers is a defensive terror. He swatted 3.4 shots and notched 1.2 steals per game. Georgia Techās perimeter guys were good, but Lammers is so impactful that you could flank him with four of the worst defenders in the country and still field a respectable defense. He cleans up that many mistakes.
āIf he doesnāt play well, itās almost impossible for us [to win],ā Georgia Tech head coach Josh Pastner . āWe need him to be really good for us, game in and game out.ā
Lammers' offense came along, too. He averaged 14 points on 52 percent shooting. His offensive game is kind of like his defense. Heās stronger, smarter and wants it more than his opponent. Thatās a recipe for success.
But Lammers could become a megastar if he extended his range, similar to former Indiana center Thomas Bryant. He took only two 3s last year, but he seems capable of taking more, given his solid mid-range jumper and his respectable free-throw percentage (74). Lammers is a good back-to-the-basket player who gobbles up offensive boards and is a constant lob threat. If he expands his game, he could score 20 a night.Georgia Tech doesnāt need to be amazing on offense to make the NCAA tournament. It just needs to be average, considering its defense.
If Lammers adds to his offensive arsenal, count on that to happen.
*Reggie Lynch, Minnesota
Skill needed: Post moves
Lammers and Lynch might be the two best rim-protectors in the country. Both are cinder blocks that prop up their defense whenever needed.
Minnesota plays a hyper-aggressive defensive perimeter scheme because of Lynch. Without him as the last line of defense, the Golden Gophers wouldnāt feel comfortable gambling for steals and picking guys up at half court. When the fear of getting beat off the dribble vanishes, it opens up possibilities. Foes shot a measly 31 percent from 3 against Minnesota thanks to its airtight style. Lynch averaged 3.5 blocks a game.
Heās fine offensively, albeit clearly limited. Lynch averaged only six shots a game last year. Heās every bit the defensive player Lammers is, but the Gopher center is a watered-down version on offense. Lynch will catch some lob dunks and mooch garbage points, and he's a rock-solid screener. But heās not a guy youāll dump the ball in to when the shot-clock is winding down. Lammers should extend his range, but heās an effective post scorer. Lynch needs to walk before he runs.
Minnesota ranked 22nd offensively and 77th defensively last season. Its style was grinding out wins. Lynchās game is an apt representation of the Gophersā style.
If they can improve 10-20 spots in the offensive rankings, weāll be talking about them being dangerous in March. To do that, Lynch doesnāt need to become former Duke stud Jahlil Okafor on the block, but he can become ex-Villanova big man Daniel Ochefu. In other words, the offense doesnāt need to revolve around Lynch. But it should be able to count on him for a tough bucket underneath when needed.
Weāll see how much Lynch was working on that in the offseason.