Were there some incredible classes or has it always been lousy?
As far as player rankings go, this 2018 class is tops. Would have been even more so if not for the PG shenanigans.Isn't the 2018 class of Kopp/Nance/Young/Greer in this conversation already, even without full career evidence? 3 starters and 1 role player just 2 years in.
Isn't the 2018 class of Kopp/Nance/Young/Greer in this conversation already, even without full career evidence? 3 starters and 1 role player just 2 years in.
I think that run of players in 98-99 were good *Northwestern* players, but not particularly good Big Ten players.Good question for a stay-at-home day!! A painful question, but a good one.
My initial thought to this was the same as 320: Anybody who was in the Eschmeyer and McKinney classes were the best ones. I can't speak to the McKinney class, but there was so little around the Eschmeyer class that I don't think his class makes top five.
There's also the question of whether we're judging best class by ratings/reputation or production. I'm going with production.
I'd probably vote for the '14 class also - Law, BMac, Lindsey, Skelly and Vasser.
For me, a close second would be either the 2000 class or the '09 class.
The 2000 class is Jitim, Long and ECat's guy, McCants. Are points taken off for Cortez, Long and Goode?
The 2009 class is Crawford, Hearn and Marcotuillio.
As an aside, as I look through the classes:
a) It really emphasizes things. That's a whole lotta bad.
b) In retrospect, there was a real opportunity missed with the classes of '98, '99 and '00 - Lepore, Hardy, Drayton, Deren, Blake, Burke, Ben Johnson, Jennings, McCants and Jitim in three years.
It's too bad KO wasn't less nuts about the way he ran his business.
It's too bad McCants had to do his growing up in Milwaukee.
Isn't the 2018 class of Kopp/Nance/Young/Greer in this conversation already, even without full career evidence? 3 starters and 1 role player just 2 years in.
How about the class that had Jim Stack? Think it may have included Rathel and Michael Jenkins???Good question for a stay-at-home day!! A painful question, but a good one.
My initial thought to this was the same as 320: Anybody who was in the Eschmeyer and McKinney classes were the best ones. I can't speak to the McKinney class, but there was so little around the Eschmeyer class that I don't think his class makes top five.
There's also the question of whether we're judging best class by ratings/reputation or production. I'm going with production.
I'd probably vote for the '14 class also - Law, BMac, Lindsey, Skelly and Vasser.
For me, a close second would be either the 2000 class or the '09 class.
The 2000 class is Jitim, Long and ECat's guy, McCants. Are points taken off for Cortez, Long and Goode?
The 2009 class is Crawford, Hearn and Marcotuillio.
As an aside, as I look through the classes:
a) It really emphasizes things. That's a whole lotta bad.
b) In retrospect, there was a real opportunity missed with the classes of '98, '99 and '00 - Lepore, Hardy, Drayton, Deren, Blake, Burke, Ben Johnson, Jennings, McCants and Jitim in three years.
It's too bad KO wasn't less nuts about the way he ran his business.
It's too bad McCants had to do his growing up in Milwaukee.
Good question for a stay-at-home day!! A painful question, but a good one.
The 2009 class is Crawford, Hearn and Marcotuillio.
Hearn wasn’t recruited.
I recall reading a story his senior year that his experience was much closer to “showed up at the basketball office and asked for a tryout” than most walk-ons. I could *also* be wrong , though. Can’t find any stories to verify.I know he was a walk-on, but i have hard time believing that Carmody wasn't familiar with him before he came to campus. Could be wrong though. . .
I was wondering if the '88 class deserved consideration? Lambiotte transfers in from NC State that, year, right?
This was the class I was going to ask about. The Rex Walters group.
Holmes, Pederson and Walters. I looked it up this morning. I thought Nixon was in the group but he was not.
Honestly, the Baldwin and Rankin class was pretty good. They came into a team that was decimated by transfers and made the NIT as seniors.
Honestly, the Baldwin and Rankin class was pretty good. They came into a team that was decimated by transfers and made the NIT as seniors.
That 2009 class is not getting enough credit. Reggie Hearn is the only NU graduate to score a point in the NBA in 20 years, and Drew Crawford is top 25 in career points in the Big 10. Crawford is ahead of some really, really, good players and he's had a long career overseas. Still crazy to me that the 2011-12 team with Drew Crawford, Shurna, Jershon Cobb, and Hearn couldn't break through (finished 8-10 in the Big 10)
Walters and Lambiotte played one year together. He and Holmes (to Rice) and Kevin Nixon (to Creighton) all transferred out after a 2-16 Big Ten season so while it was a good class, it never really panned out and pulled the rug out from under Bill Foster.This was the class I was going to ask about. The Rex Walters group.
Cobb never could stay healthy and Hearn didn’t emerge until his senior year as I recall. We tend to remember guys at their peak, but those peaks don’t always overlap. Senior Hearn, Shurna and Crawford May have don’t ie but I think they were all different years.
Cobb never could stay healthy and Hearn didn’t emerge until his senior year as I recall. We tend to remember guys at their peak, but those peaks don’t always overlap. Senior Hearn, Shurna and Crawford May have don’t ie but I think they were all different years.
Northwestern's greatest Chicago recruiting haul, Gaddis Rathel, Michael Jenkins and Jim Stack all came in the same year to make up the core of that great first NIT team, the one that beat John Paxson and Notre Dame before a packed house at the Rosemont Horizon (before it became the Allstate Arena). Going back to the 50s, Joe Ruklick, Phil Warren and Nick Mantis were the senior core of a team that beat Jerry West in the old Chicago Stadium, and finished 2nd in the Big Ten, and Larry Glass got Dale Kelley and Don Adams in a class that beat Wes Unseld and Louisville in the Stadium. Ruklick and Adams both had solid NBA careers. And the Cats got a highly rated group of Jim Burns, Ron Kozlicki, Walt Tiberi and Jim Cummins (who was a high school all-American) in their class in 1963, and they had some decent seasons. McGaw Hall hosted the 1956 NCAA championships and a bunch of regionals in the 50s and 60s and was one of the largest college arenas in the country until the big bucks came into hoops. Then our basketball Dark Ages began.
That 2009 class is not getting enough credit. Reggie Hearn is the only NU graduate to score a point in the NBA in 20 years, and Drew Crawford is top 25 in career points in the Big 10. Crawford is ahead of some really, really, good players and he's had a long career overseas. Still crazy to me that the 2011-12 team with Drew Crawford, Shurna, Jershon Cobb, and Hearn couldn't break through (finished 8-10 in the Big 10)
Ivy League? is that you Mr. Strotz???NU has obviously not had a good basketball program, but I think we sometimes tend to overlook that we play in a league that is consistently among the top 2-3 in the country.
It certainly was as good as any in the '70s and '80s, slumped in the '90s when coaches such as Knight and Keady started aging out, and the ESPN programming of the ACC with Billy Packer and Duke Vitale gave that league a big boost, but lately seems to be getting back to its competitive self.
In a less-talented league the Cats certainly would have been to more than one dance. But it's hard to get traction when you're constantly the doormat. I think the timing of the Rosemont year along with injuries in Law and Mac's senior year couldn't have come at a worse time.
I hear you, but Shurna is number 1 all time in points at Northwestern and Crawford is number 2 (this is good trivia because most people think it's McKinney). They played 3 seasons together!
Nixon was part of that class, but had a hurt knee and redshirted that freshman season. We all know what happened next, so as a recruiting class that group probably had top 3 potential, but the narrative was sadly cut short.
NU has obviously not had a good basketball program, but I think we sometimes tend to overlook that we play in a league that is consistently among the top 2-3 in the country.
It certainly was as good as any in the '70s and '80s, slumped in the '90s when coaches such as Knight and Keady started aging out, and the ESPN programming of the ACC with Billy Packer and Duke Vitale gave that league a big boost, but lately seems to be getting back to its competitive self.
In a less-talented league the Cats certainly would have been to more than one dance. But it's hard to get traction when you're constantly the doormat. I think the timing of the Rosemont year along with injuries in Law and Mac's senior year couldn't have come at a worse time.
They were both wonderful players who also scored a lot of points because they played a lot of games/minutes. They were great by NU standards but almost every big ten program has guys with as much or more talent and more depth of talent as well. The best potential roster I'd ever seen was year Coble left the program. That would have been Coble, Shurna, Drew, Juice, Moore I believe (maybe some I'm forgetting). That felt like a roster with top 25 talent if healthy and with good chemistry.
^ Also been saying that for years.
It's no coincidence that recruiting started improving once the (modest) renovations to the BB facilities were underway.
That's certainly not to say BC wasn't w/o his faults - recruiting wasn't fave thing to do and he should have hired an assistant w/ local ties from the very beginning.
Took too long to develop ties w/ the Chicagoland high schools - didn't start to get going until Juice, Capocci - followed by Shurna, Rowley, Freundt and Crawford.
I'd say that's even more telling of how good of a player they were.
Opposing teams only had to concentrate on stopping (usually) 2 guys on the 'Cats.
After Juice graduated, Johnny had to shoulder even more of the load on O (altho Drew was coming into his own).
While Shurna's FG% dipped a little (had the most FGA his SR yr), he upped his PPG to 20.
Imagine if opposing defensive schemes weren't predicated on stopping Johnny.
The guy was a brilliant X's and O's guy but so are a bunch of other big ten coaches.
The Princeton O hurt with rebounding and defense. A lot of very good recruits wanted nothing to do with that type of offense.I could never figure out if I found him excellent with X's and O's or just excellent with X's and O's for the level of recruiting talent he had.
Always felt he over achieved for talent levels that made a dunk a reason to lose your mind with happiness, that involved praying every game you'd only be beaten severely, and not totally annihilated on the boards.
The Princeton worked on hiding deficiencies, but would he look so competent with a different kind of group of players?
The Princeton O hurt with rebounding and defense. A lot of very good recruits wanted nothing to do with that type of offense.
I could never figure out if I found him excellent with X's and O's or just excellent with X's and O's for the level of recruiting talent he had.
Always felt he over achieved for talent levels that made a dunk a reason to lose your mind with happiness, that involved praying every game you'd only be beaten severely, and not totally annihilated on the boards.
The Princeton worked on hiding deficiencies, but would he look so competent with a different kind of group of players?
BC's level of recruiting was not much different and perhaps better than NU historically--absent a couple of outlier recruits etc.. The difference was that he was able to coach suboptimal talent into relative competitiveness for most of the last several years. I think he made the NIT 4 straight years, a couple of NCAA bubbles, and then only missed the NIT his last year when team got decimated with injury. So his recruiting was about the same as our historical levels, but his ability to have them overperform when not decimated by injury (a common ocurrence at NU it feels) was impressive.