Pitino speak for Ian at the 3 spotI’m sure there is some truth to it and also a bit of him trying to camouflage our still heavy need at PG.
Pitino speak for Ian at the 3 spotI’m sure there is some truth to it and also a bit of him trying to camouflage our still heavy need at PG.
Its as laughable as suggesting cruz davis is coming back to st johns.Boogie nor Pettiford are/were coming here regardless of what Jackson decides. I don’t understand the repeated mention of these two who have given no indication either directly or through other channels, that they have any intention f entering the portal.
Kidd couldn’t shootKidd, Iverson, Paul, Stockton and Nash were all PG’s in college. Some were more shoot first PG’s but all ran their offense as PG.
Everyone of the players I mentioned were terrific SCORING GUARDS. They were the stars of their teams. Their coaches and team required them to provide offensive POINTS and not be distributors.I followed Kidd, Iverson and Nash closely in college and each played the point
Great driving guard that made everyone around him better.Kidd couldn’t shoot
Kidd couldn’t shoot
Your response forced me to Google this because I questioned my aging memory.Kidd, Iverson, Paul, Stockton and Nash were all PG’s in college. Some were more shoot first PG’s but all ran their offense as PG.
Everyone of the players I mentioned were terrific SCORING GUARDS. They were the stars of their teams. Their coaches and team required them to provide offensive POINTS and not be distributors.
Ergo, they were the prototypical combo guard.
Over the decades many high school kids that were 6'3 or 6'4 played the 3 or the 4 in high school. The super talented and physically mature were able to continue as forwards in college and excel at the small forward position to the point of becoming All Americans (Daryl Griffith and David Thompson).
Now, Dean Meminger........that was a pure point guard. Loved him!