That's what's really exciting. Here are a few combos that show the extremes: Big/Powerful: Dawkins/Hopkins, Barrow/Hall, Nabors/Sanders, Brown, Nwevo/Worrell Small/Quick: Dawkins/McThay, Hopkins/Todd, Barrow/Hall, Nabors/Sanders, Brown Shooting: Dawkins, Hopkins, Barrow/Todd, Brown, Custer Lockdown Defense: McThay, Hopkins, Nabors, Sanders, Nwevo
Brown can't play the 3. He's a post player with an outside shot. If you want to start the 5 best players, you start Dawkins, Hopkins, Barrow (or possibly Hall), Sanders, and Jay Brown. If you want to commit to Nwevo as a starter, Jay Brown can be the first big off the bench. Nabors and Sanders have the lateral movement to play the 3 defensively. I haven't seen that from Jay Brown.
She's incredible. She doesn't look anything like a freshman. She can handle the ball like a point guard, mix it up down low a little, shoot, defend any position. She handles herself and plays the game like a veteran. She's going create match up nightmares. (Oh yeah, and at risk of sounding like a broken record, she's pretty easy on the eyes.)
Lamar has 8, UL-M has 7. I've got two questions: Who was the last Lamar player to lead the nation in an NCAA-recognized statistical category? What was the category? And what year? Lamar owns the 22nd-largest margin of victory in NCAA Division I history. Lamar beat their Southland opponent by 69 points. Who was the opponent?