Goodman: Lessons learned from Champions Classic
Kentucky took down Duke with ease on Tuesday night and Michigan State got a sensational performance from senior Denzel Valentine to knock off Kansas.
The Champions Classic is the perfect environment to get some answers, with the bright lights and quality competition that is often lacking through much of nonconference play.
Here's what we learned after watching the doubleheader on Tuesday night:
1. Duke lacks a point guard who makes others better
Sure, freshman Derryck Thornton made a few shots in the 74-63 loss to Kentucky, but the Blue Devils lack a ready-made point guard. Matt Jones has never really played the point, and he has been forced to run the team. Last season, Tyus Jones found teammates for uncontested shots. Duke's best offense early in the game was a Marshall Plumlee putback, which isn't a good thing for Coach K. Mike Krzyzewski is a terrific coach who will make adjustments, and the offense will improve, but Duke still will have difficulty scoring this season.
2. Tyler Ulis is Kentucky's leader
This isn't so much of a takeaway but a reminder of how much I have loved Ulis, Kentucky's diminutive point guard, from the first day I saw him three years ago in AAU ball. Ulis does everything on the court: He runs the team, makes quality decisions, makes shots when needed, gives teammates easy buckets, defends and even rebounds well for his size (5-foot-9, 160 pounds). Championship teams need high-level floor leaders and Ulis is just that. This is the No. 1 reason why UK has a chance to get back to the Final Four.
3. Michigan State is a national power
I was worried about my preseason national champion pick of Michigan State after hearing that Seth Greenberg and Fran Fraschilla also chose Tom Izzo's team. However, after watching Valentine put up a triple-double and carry the Spartans on his back in the second half, I feel much better about it. I'll put the coach-player duo of Izzo and Valentine up against any other combo in the country.
4. MSU is incomplete
This Michigan State team we saw wasn't nearly what it could or should be. The Spartans played without two key frontcourt guys in Gavin Schilling (turf toe) and Marvin Clark Jr. (left foot injury), and also didn't get anything out of West Virginia transfer Eron Harris (two points). Freshman big man Deyonta Davis has a chance to be special down the road. Izzo has no shortage of shooters, with freshman Matt McQuaid (who can do more than just shoot it) the best on the team.
5. Grayson Allen has to embrace contact rather than shy away from it
On too many occasions, the Duke guard drove the right side and threw up a runner off the glass that was way off the mark. Allen got to the line only three times, all in the second half.
6. Kentucky's freshmen are mature
The duo of Jamal Murray and Isaiah Briscoe may be young, but they look like men. Murray is as good as advertised. I'd never seen him play in person before Tuesday night, and he's more athletic than he looks on tape. Murray and Briscoe are big, strong guards -- and that's one of the key reasons why they beat Duke. The guards were stronger and more physical.
7. Wayne Selden Jr.'s summer hasn't carried over
He had a terrific performance this past summer at the World University Games, but the junior wing remains inconsistent and will need to be more reliable for Kansas to be an elite team capable of cutting down the nets. Selden finished 3-of-12 from the field and was just 1-of-8 in the second half. Selden made 2-of-6 shots from beyond the arc, but needs to get back to what he does best -- driving the ball to the basket instead of settling for long-range shots.
8. It's going to take time for Duke freshman Brandon Ingram
The 6-9 skilled wing has a ton of potential, but he's only about 190 pounds. Ingram is ranked high on NBA draft boards because of that potential, but he will struggle with the physicality of the game. And he's also a kid who need to develop more of a killer instinct.
9. Kansas' guards need to remember to feed the big men
The Jayhawks' bread-and-butter is using angles to get the ball down low. Senior Perry Ellis was effective early and is tough to stop with his array of moves in the paint. However, four KU perimeter players took 21 of the 32 shots in the second half. They need to find a way to get Ellis the ball more often, as he's a difficult matchup because of his ability to score in a variety of ways.
10. Kansas needs Cheick Diallo for his energy and toughness
The freshman still hasn't been cleared by the NCAA (the organization has yet to make any decision on Diallo, who watched the game from his dorm). Diallo won't be a huge scoring threat, but he plays with a high motor and will certainly help coach Bill Self and the Jayhawks.