šŸ€ RECAP of '18 season: Differing views: A flash in the pan? Bama better without Sexton? Or, a sign of things to come?

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CECIL HURT: Was this season a flash in the pan or something bigger?

They could be magical or maddening, frustrating or fun and the most consistent thing about them was uncertainty. You never knew from one game to the next — from one half to the next — what you were going to get from this Alabama basketball team.

Ultimately, the good outweighed the bad. There was a return to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2012, and a win in that tournament for the first time since 2006. There was an exciting run in the SEC Tournament. If the 23-point loss to Villanova that halted things was a disappointment, which it was in some ways, it was not a shock. The Wildcats are as good a bet as any remaining team to win their second NCAA championship in three years, a model of confidence and efficiency the Crimson Tide could not approach at this point.

So the Alabama basketball season was a qualified success, although there are plenty of Crimson Tide fans out there willing to argue loudly about what ā€œqualifiedā€ means. In the longer view, the success achieved by the 2018 team will be viewed from the perspective of 2019 and 2020. Was the just-completed season an oddity, a combination of precocious teenagers playing (and occasionally acting) like precocious teenagers? Why would a team display lightning flashes of brilliance but not the consistency to play at a steady level, like a genius toddler who accomplishes feats far above his or her age level but lacks the attention span and maturity to do the dull but necessary tasks consistently?

The success of the 2018 season will be measured in whether or not it was a building block for the future.

The first step will be what happens in an intriguing offseason.

First, without speaking for Collin Sexton or his family, there doesn’t appear to be any economic reason for him to come back for a second season. He is saying the right things and is wise to take a few days, talk to his family and weigh his options — but a lottery pick is a lottery pick.

With that said, I do not belong to the camp that says Alabama will be ā€œbetter off without Sexton.ā€ The truth is Alabama will be more conventional without him, more grounded, more like a basic blues band that finds itself without a Stevie Ray Vaughn, rest his soul, on lead guitar.

Sexton was a virtuoso, and had to be incorporated into an offense creatively — he was by no means a ā€œpoint guardā€ in the way some national media tried to describe him. Sometimes the combinations in which he worked were great, sometimes not. But his talents and competitive fire will be missed.

Second, remember attrition and player movement is the norm in college basketball, not the exception.

Given those two points, there is a lot of young talent at Alabama that can be molded if, as Avery Johnson said on Saturday, ā€œwe develop our players even better. Those who have different weaknesses in their games, we’ve just got to help them get better.ā€

Donta Hall, Dazon Ingram, Avery Johnson Jr., Braxton Key (if he doesn’t test the pro waters again), Daniel Giddens and (possibly) Riley Norris would form a veteran core. All have ā€œweaknesses,ā€ but all can improve and contribute more. This year’s freshmen — Herb Jones, John Petty, Galin Smith, Alex Reese — will be experienced sophomores. The recruiting class is solid if unspectacular and Tevin Mack, the Texas transfer, is a proven scorer at the Power 5 level who has reportedly approached practice sessions in his redshirt year with a passion to be a star. That’s a strong group.

The SEC is tough and getting tougher. But Alabama closed with enough momentum to carry over into another tournament year. If they don’t get there, 2018 might not have been a success after all, just a flash in the pan. If things blossom, then it was a year that built the foundation of better years to come.

https://www.tidesports.com/cecil-hurt-was-this-season-a-flash-in-the-pan-or-something-bigger/
 
One comment about this tourney and how it relates to Bama and I'm through with Bama basketball until next season. Like it or lump it, I really don't care. When you look at the upsets and the Cinderellas, they all seem to have one thing in common: shooters. Little guys. Medium sized guys. Slow guys. They shoot. And lots of them are still playing. Until Bama recruits and signs shooters, they have absolutely no shot at advancing very far in the tournament. And I'm talking about guys who can do it all the time, for real, not twice a season.

Alabama had the most athletic team on the court Saturday. They were longer. They were faster. They were taller. Two or three of them might be in the NBA some day. The Tide got drilled. Jay Wright provided nice lip service the day before the game. Thanks for the compliments, coach. Be honest next time. You saw Bama's deficiencies all over the place.

If you watched UMBC last night, you saw their point guard absolutely killing it. Bama would have never recruited him. Maybe he plays better defense than walk-on Lawson Schaffer. Who knows? My favorite team doesn't give scholarships to guys who aren't athletic, tall, and fast, even if they can play basketball.

If everyone but Sexton returns next season and Bama's new player is as good as the pundits claim, Bama will be better. They will enter the dance ranked higher. But which team that can shoot will take them down in round 2 or the Sweet 16 though? Some under-ranked, undersized, underdog with shooters, that's who. Or some higher ranked team that marvels at our athleticism while they fire away at long range and then celebrates after making 16 threes.
 
Taunting? That was a horse shit "T" if I've ever seen one! Guys yap all the time and nothing is said or done. Down 26 and referee makes a point to get himself noticed. Swallow the whistle!!!!
BAMA hasn't had a player with that much bravado in a VERY LONG TIME!!! James "Hollywood" Robinson long time!!!
 
I've a series of questions looking back over these last three years. Here's where I've started. Is the team where we were told they would be when Johnson was hired? So, the first thing I did just to be sure...(you'll want to jump ahead a few minutes of you want to skip the introductory thank you's..



 
After watching the video I think we'll agree the program is where we thought it would be.

It's funny that the season would have likely ended differently if they'd have had a worse seed. A bad draw, sure. That's playing on a big stage, against a lot of upperclassmen that can be learned from.

If we remember this football season and always include how injury riddled the team was we must do the same with this team. 70+ starts missed by starters this season? It forced how many different lineups?

Ups and downs.

I can be given any reason to characterize this season in the same terms as one of the down periods. Good season for year three.

National recognition of the brand? Check.
Made it to the tourney? Check (Won one there as well.)
SEC? I wanted a double bye. We didn't get it so that's two of three. And now that expectation of mine has taken on a new meaning as well, hasn't it?
 
It's been said but I'll repeat it, the game is changing toward the 3 point line. Teams are playing outside in. The barners get it and we all had a good laugh at their expense yesterday, but they won an SEC title with those midgets. Tennessee has invested and gets it and they too won the other half of the SEC. As Chief stated so eloquently, we need shooters and lots of them. Ball movement will beat iso ball every time. Getting destroyed by stationary players that really do very little athletically besides spot and shoot is telling.
 
One comment about this tourney and how it relates to Bama and I'm through with Bama basketball until next season. Like it or lump it, I really don't care. When you look at the upsets and the Cinderellas, they all seem to have one thing in common: shooters. Little guys. Medium sized guys. Slow guys. They shoot. And lots of them are still playing. Until Bama recruits and signs shooters, they have absolutely no shot at advancing very far in the tournament. And I'm talking about guys who can do it all the time, for real, not twice a season.

Alabama had the most athletic team on the court Saturday. They were longer. They were faster. They were taller. Two or three of them might be in the NBA some day. The Tide got drilled. Jay Wright provided nice lip service the day before the game. Thanks for the compliments, coach. Be honest next time. You saw Bama's deficiencies all over the place.

If you watched UMBC last night, you saw their point guard absolutely killing it. Bama would have never recruited him. Maybe he plays better defense than walk-on Lawson Schaffer. Who knows? My favorite team doesn't give scholarships to guys who aren't athletic, tall, and fast, even if they can play basketball.

If everyone but Sexton returns next season and Bama's new player is as good as the pundits claim, Bama will be better. They will enter the dance ranked higher. But which team that can shoot will take them down in round 2 or the Sweet 16 though? Some under-ranked, undersized, underdog with shooters, that's who. Or some higher ranked team that marvels at our athleticism while they fire away at long range and then celebrates after making 16 threes.

It's the way the game has evolved (or devolved in my opinion). Partly because its more "exciting" to score 150 points, partly because the rule changes have made it almost impossible to play physically on defense without getting called for a million fouls. It's been a slower evolution in the college game because teams were still able to win with dominant defense and big men but it's been that way in the NBA for quite awhile now. Now, you see these teams with 5-6 sharpshooters out there just chucking up threes Steph Curry style and not giving a damn about defense, which is where these 120-115 type scores come from. That's where the game is headed.
 


Collin Sexton is a star freshman point guard for the University of Alabama’s basketball team. He’s so good that although Oklahoma’s Trae Young has a bigger name, Sexton will probably be picked ahead of him in the NBA draft. And while Alabama had an up-and-down season this year, that they even made it to the NCAA tournament was largely due to Sexton’s play in the SEC Tournament.

Anyway, they lost Saturday to Villanova, a team that’s just much better than them. In a weekend full of upsets, Villanova handling Alabama was one of the few outcomes that most people rightly predicted. During the game, while Alabama was down 26 points, Sexton was called for a technical foul for taunting Villanova’s Mikal Bridges. Obviously, this was not a good look, but 19-year-olds do dumb shit sometimes, and this was far from an unforgivable act.

It was also last weekend that I learned that 1) Joseph Goodman exists, 2) Joseph Goodman writes things that can be read on the internet and 3) Joseph Goodman is a living icon. If Earth is around for another 10,000 years or so, and if people are still writing about sports on the internet then, you still won’t find another take worse than the one Joseph Goodman wrote on Collin Sexton.

Like, remember that scene from The Matrix when Neo gets shot in the hallway and comes back to life and finally realizes he’s the One and sees everything in code and stops the bullets in midair and Agent Smith rushes him and Neo starts doing some no-look, one-handed kung fu shit while making a face like ā€œThese hoes won’t hold me back!ā€ and then dives into Agent Smith’s chest? Well, this piece is Joesph Goodman diving into the internet’s chest.

It starts with something fact-ish and smarmy, a narrative device to let everyone know that Goodman is coming from a rational and sober place. JOSEPH GOODMAN IS A MOTHERFUCKING ADULT:

Collin Sexton’s final action as a college basketball player was getting hit with a technical foul for taunting a superior opponent while trailing by 26 points.​

Then he begins his descent into full dog-whistling schoolmarm:

Not exactly the last impression someone wants to make before turning pro, and probably not the type of image the University of Alabama wants to project to the rest of the country after making it back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2012.​

I’m sure the state of Alabama has some bigger concerns about the image they wish to project to the rest of the country, but maybe that’s just me.

Also, Alabama made it back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2012 BECAUSE OF COLLIN SEXTON, THE STAR FRESHMAN POINT GUARD YOU’RE ABOUT TO PLAY MAGA YAHTZEE WITH IN THIS FUCKING ā€œCOLUMN,ā€ YOU DICKWAD! Goodman goes on:

Classless.​
Clueless.​
Unacceptable.​

Holy shit! Goodman brought out the big guns. Whenever you compose entire paragraphs with just one word, you mean business. Someone call the manager because some serious white business is about to go down. Joseph Goodman is here to write shitty takes and chew bubble gum, and he’s out of bubble gum:

So, Alabama’s one-and-done point guard took a seat on the bench and watched the final few minutes of his brief college career from the sidelines. Credit to Alabama coach Avery Johnson for at least getting that right on Saturday in Pittsburgh. From the bench, Sexton got a good look at what it must feel like to watch Alabama pummel, say, Coastal Carolina inside Bryant-Denny Stadium on a Saturday in the fall.​
Only worse.​
At least Nick Saban is nice enough not to run up the score on the sacrificial lambs of college football. Villanova isn’t wiring $1.5 million into Alabama’s bank account on Monday morning, either.​

You probably have to be a seasoned reader of shitty sports takes to see what’s happening here. Although the athletes in power-conference football and basketball are predominately black, basketball is generally regarded as a blacker sport. One of the reasons for this distinction is that basketball generally allows for more individual freedom and improvisation than football does. And by creating this useless juxtaposition of Collin Sexton and the University of Alabama’s football team, Goodman is reminding the readers that football in general and Nick Saban (Alabama’s football coach) specifically wouldn’t allow such indecency.

Joseph Goodman is a pillowcase filled with blueberries.

Goodman follows with some more bullshit and then (finally) gets to the climax. From this point on, we should probably just start calling ā€œexcessive foreplayā€ ā€œpulling a Joseph Goodmanā€:

One, Alabama should be better this time next year.​
Yes, Sexton will be gone, but that doesn’t seem like such a bad thing after watching him against a truly special team. Alabama wants to win a national championship in basketball. That doesn’t happen with a 6-foot-2 point guard who wants to play isolation basketball when things get tough.​
Sexton wouldn’t say definitively that he was going pro after Alabama’s loss, but his body language screamed it at the end of regulation.​

Ah yes. We all know that you can’t win national championships with a player talented and driven and confident enough to score 38 points in a game where his team only had three players. Nope. A college basketball team with national-championship aspirations can’t use players like that. Maybe if Collin Sexton wants to help the team, he’d be better served selling hot sausages in the tailgate instead of playing on the court.

The rest of the piece is dumb and stupid and shitty and full of dog whistles and just reiterates what Goodman said already. The irony here is that as wrong as Goodman is, he might be right about Alabama. Next year, when Collin Sexton is in the NBA, they might be even better. But they’ll be better because the returning players will be better, with another year to grow and gel. Not because their best player is gone.

Anyway, Joseph Goodman is a columnist for Alabama Media Group. He’s on Twitter @JoeGoodmanJr. And I know all of this because it’s attached to the end of the piece, and it’s the only part that makes any sense. Talk about burying the lede!
 
What is the expectation for next season? What is Alabama's ceiling, in other words, is it realistic to expect a national title eventually?

Not next year lol. We should be a tournament quality team next year. I think Key has a year to get back to being the player he is, Donta Hall has improved every year and once he is healed from the wrist injury I think he can develop a nice mid range game that would make him a real consistent offensive threat. I think Herb and Petty develop their offense and the rest of their game respectively. Avery Jr continues to play a nice role along with Ingram, Reese, Smith and Giddens.

I also think the addition of the Mack Kid from Texas, the point guard from Lousiana and getting back Norris will make us better all around. We will be a very deep team with a lot of options who should be able to really defend and get up and down the court.

That being said, I think we can finish in the top 5 of the SEC and get back to the tournament and hopefully make a little more noise next year. Juest remember that Auburn, Tennessee and Kentucky will all return a bunch of studs too so our league will be tough again.
 
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