(Sorry for the thread title)
I thought Thiam and EO were both pretty good stepping up in place of Freeman in terms of getting rebounds. Thiam went for 10 points. 8 rebounds and Omoruyi had 8 points, 10 rebounds. More importantly, they combined for those 18 points on 13 shots, which isn't *fantastic* but it's better than what we've been getting.
People have defended Freeman by pointing to his raw point and rebound numbers but to me they've always kind of been empty calories. Here's every game against a high-major opponent this season in which Freeman went for at least either 10 points/8 rebounds, or 8 points/10 rebounds:
Indiana: 13/8 on 11 shots
Purdue: 14/9 on 14 shots
Nebraska: 10/10 on 10 shots
Michigan: 11/11 on 12 shots
Iowa: 14/8 on 11 shots
Seton Hall: 12/16 on 14 shots
Michigan State: 13/9 on 10 shots
Minnesota: 10/12 on 16 shots
Florida State: 15/16 on 18 shots
Thiam/Omoruyi combined for 1.38 points per shot. Freeman only eclipsed that number against Illinois and Wisconsin, and he wasn't grabbing rebounds in those games. They also combined for 5 steals, 2 blocks, 3 assists, and just 2 turnovers (all turnovers/assists were Omoruyi's).
That is the kind of efficiency we've been dying for. Obviously if their usage increases by a lot the efficiency will go down, but Sanders (and next year, Mathis and Baker and Kiss) can shoulder the big usage. Get these two a little more involved, though, and good things will happen.
I thought Thiam and EO were both pretty good stepping up in place of Freeman in terms of getting rebounds. Thiam went for 10 points. 8 rebounds and Omoruyi had 8 points, 10 rebounds. More importantly, they combined for those 18 points on 13 shots, which isn't *fantastic* but it's better than what we've been getting.
People have defended Freeman by pointing to his raw point and rebound numbers but to me they've always kind of been empty calories. Here's every game against a high-major opponent this season in which Freeman went for at least either 10 points/8 rebounds, or 8 points/10 rebounds:
Indiana: 13/8 on 11 shots
Purdue: 14/9 on 14 shots
Nebraska: 10/10 on 10 shots
Michigan: 11/11 on 12 shots
Iowa: 14/8 on 11 shots
Seton Hall: 12/16 on 14 shots
Michigan State: 13/9 on 10 shots
Minnesota: 10/12 on 16 shots
Florida State: 15/16 on 18 shots
Thiam/Omoruyi combined for 1.38 points per shot. Freeman only eclipsed that number against Illinois and Wisconsin, and he wasn't grabbing rebounds in those games. They also combined for 5 steals, 2 blocks, 3 assists, and just 2 turnovers (all turnovers/assists were Omoruyi's).
That is the kind of efficiency we've been dying for. Obviously if their usage increases by a lot the efficiency will go down, but Sanders (and next year, Mathis and Baker and Kiss) can shoulder the big usage. Get these two a little more involved, though, and good things will happen.