Zoubek dealt with injuries majority of his DUke career. Thank god he finally came through!Zoubek is a good choice. I thought Zoubek played really good his junior year in spurts. He would play great his first 2 to 3 minutes and then start fouling and disappear because he was tired. He was finally well conditioned his senior year and could do it for a whole game. It was painful watching him try to make low post moves his first few years. He worked hard and became a great college player. That guy was HUGE.
Marshall Plumlee needs to be mentioned in this thread.. he was averaging 30 minutes per game his senior year, as a 7 footer.. not to mention, he is the best percentage 3pt shooter in college basketball history.
C-Well captains my, most underrated Duke players of all time, team.Chris Carrawell ! A turnover waiting to happen as a freshman. Took awkward and questionable shots as a young player. Became a solid defender and rebounder with his long arms. As a senior he really put Duke on his back. Came up huge in big games (@ UNC). He was the guy the team sort of depended on to make a play or get a basket. It was fun to see "C-Well" develop over his time at Duke. A healthy 2000 Duke team beats Florida!!!
Mason Plumlee and Nolan Smith.
Good call on Goldwire. Hard to argue that. I don’t really agree on Justise. He started out hot as fire, had a slump in the middle of the season and then picked it back up. Although that is a curve!Those were actually the first 2 that came to mind for me. I think Goldwire will be up there too when all is said and done.
I would also throw out Shelden.
As a curveball, I'll put up Justise. He was a much better player at the end of his one year.
Tate Armstrong comes to mind for me.By the time he was a Sr he was a monster
Good call on Goldwire. Hard to argue that. I don’t really agree on Justise. He started out hot as fire, had a slump in the middle of the season and then picked it back up. Although that is a curve!
I’m going with Cook, but what about Ryan Kelly?
Good call on Boozer. One thing I remember about his last 2 years is it seems he always scored when he got it down low and always secured rebounds. He was so strong with the ball.Quin Cook is up there. Zoubs happened to be an integral part of a championship team so that helps his argument (and you can't understate his impact on the 2010 team, not to mention his free throws in the championship game). And frankly, Carlos Boozer went from a butter fingered player to a someone who did not drop the rock every time he touched it in 2001 so he is on my list too. His freshmen year, he would be posted up down low and when they would throw him the ball, he would bat at it with hard hands rather than soft hands. He improved a lot too. I am a few deep in Tito's and lemonade so forgive my terrible grammar tonight.
I thought about Luke as well and decided against mentioning him. I thought while he improved, he was just more consistent. He was so boom or bust his freshman year. His soph he was just all boom.Here are a some more that came to mind:
Grayson Allen - started his freshman year seldom used and the forgotten man in the recruiting class, goes bonkers against Wake late in the season, and then singlehandedly brings us back to life in the title game and becomes a legend. Maybe the biggest statistical jump from one year to the next - 4.4 ppg as a FR to 21.6 ppg as a SO. No way he could keep up that rate of improvement (he would have averaged over 400 ppg as a SR!). Never got back to his SO year level, with all the talent around him and the on court issues, so he probably suffers a bit on this list.
Luke Kennard - doubled his scoring from FR to SO year, and did it on a team with Grayson Allen (Luke sort of took the leap I thought Grayson would take that year), Jayson Tatum, Anile Jefferson, and Frank Jackson.
Amile Jefferson - steady improvement over a 5-year career. Reserve role as a FR, key player on a national championship team as a JR, and then the primary low post guy his SR seasons.
Alaa Abdelnaby - similar to Zoubek and Marshall Plumlee, took a huge leap his senior year. Like his teammate Phil Henderson, another guy who doesn’t get talked about much. Could be psychological damage from the title game loss to UNLV.
I thought about Luke as well and decided against mentioning him. I thought while he improved, he was just more consistent. He was so boom or bust his freshman year. His soph he was just all boom.