I had initially thought about including this news in my Sunday links, but decided it was actually worth a full post upon further review.
For those who follow ACC basketball (as I hope you all do if you read this blog), you probably already know that former Duke guard Elliot Williams announced he would be leaving Durham because of family medical reasons. He has already picked a new school and, as many predicted, that school is Memphis. Williams is a huge get for new coach Josh Pastner, but that is not what I want to focus on.
As you may remember last season, Williams, a freshman, began the season out of coach Mike Krzyzewski’s rotation, but eventually replaced now-departed Greg Paulus as the starting point guard and performed admirably.
After registering a DNP on February 15 against Boston College, Williams averaged 7.3 points, 3.4 rebounds, and 1.0 assists per game, all while being asked to bring the ball up and guard the opponent’s best perimeter player. Most pundits thought he would build on his stellar finish to the freshman campaign and take over the starting point guard job for the Blue Devils full time, but now he is gone.
How does that affect the Terrapin men’s basketball team? Read on to find out.
With Williams gone, the Blue Devils will rely on a combination of rising junior Nolan Smith and rising senior Jon Scheyer in their backcourt. Williams’ departure gives the Terps arguably the best back-court in the ACC (give an assist to uber-recruit John Wall for not choosing an ACC school).
Take a look at what each team lost and who their best three guards are for next season (keep in mind these are just guards):
Maryland
Loses: I may be mistaken, but I don’t remember Dave Neal being a guard
Best three: Greivis Vasquez, Eric Hayes, Adrian Bowie
Duke
Loses: Gerald Henderson (NBA Draft), Elliot Williams (Transfer), Greg Paulus (Graduation/football at Syracuse)
Best three: Nolan Smith, Jon Scheyer, Martynas Pocius
Boston College
Loses: Tyrese Rice (graduation)
Best three: Rakim Sanders, Biko Paris, Reggie Jackson
Clemson
Loses: KC Rivers (graduation), Terrence Oglesby (left to play in Europe)
Best three: Demontez Stitt, Tanner Smith, incoming freshman Donte Hill
Florida State
Loses: Toney Douglas (NBA Draft), Brian Hoff (graduation)
Best three: Luke Loucks, Derwin Kitchen, incoming freshman Michael Snaer
Georgia Tech
Loses: Lewis Clinch, Ty Anderson, Gary Cage (all graduation)
Best three: Iman Shumpert, Maurice Miller, incoming freshman Mfon Udofia
Miami
Loses: Jack McClinton (NBA Draft), Lance Hurdle (graduation), Ryan Quigtar (graduation)
Best three: Eddie Rios (if he can stay un-suspended), transfer Malcolm Grant, incoming freshman Durand Scott
North Carolina
Loses: Ty Lawson (NBA Draft), Bobby Frasor (graduation), Wayne Ellington (NBA Draft), Jack Wooten (graduation)
Best three: Marcus Ginyard, Larry Drew II, incoming freshman Dexter Strickland
N.C. State
Loses: Courtney Fells, Farnold Degand (both to graduation)
Best three: Javier Gonzalez, Julius Mays, incoming freshman Lorenzo Brown
Virginia
Loses: Mamadi Diane (graduation)
Best three: Sylven Landesburg, Sammy Zeglinski, Calvin Baker
Virginia Tech
Loses: A.D. Vassallo (graduation)
Best three: Malcolm Delaney, Hank Thorns, Dorenzo Hudson
Wake Forest
Loses: Jeff Teague (NBA Draft), Harvey Hale, , Jimmy McQuilkin, Mike Lepore, (all to graduation)
Best three: Gary Clark, Ishmael Smith, L.D. Williams
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Scan the list and you can see, the only teams close to competing with the Terps for the best guard groupings are Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Virginia, and Virginia Tech, and that is assuming that ballyhooed freshmen Udofia and Strickland live up to potential. If Williams had stayed, the Blue Devils would probably be right up there in that group as well.
Also consider that the Terps can also run out rising sophomore Sean Mosley who is almost sure to improve offensively, and the streaky Cliff Tucker. If you expand to the best five guards there is no doubt Gary Williams club is the deepest.
Granted we knew that, with Vasquez back, the Terps would be stacked at the guard position. The real problem still remains in the depleted front-court where the Terps will need incoming freshmen James Padgett and Jordan Williams to grow up in a hurry.
But it is still nice to know the foundation is strong with an impressive stable of ball-handlers.
lemairedbk@gmail.com
[...] Mr. Lemaire deftly pointed out yesterday, the Terps are already strong on the perimeter. It could even a bit crowded out there [...]
its was greatest moment for Williams i think.
Williams did NOT play point guard for Duke. It was Scheyer who replaced Paulus at the point.
Also, Martynas Pocius will not be playing for Duke next year; he’s signed with an agent and will be playing professionally in Europe.
Wow , someone has an exaggerated sense of self importance. Maryland will finish 4th in the ACC, at best. The beatdown the Terps received at the hands of the Memphis Tigers in the NCAA tourney SHOULD show you exactly how far off you really are. Yeah, so you don’t lose guards, so what. None have been stellar to begin with.