I do realize that, but Randle isn't the first player to average double-doubles in college while facing double teams either. Guys who come into the league and develop into nightly double-double threats typically finish their college careers with better shooting numbers is all. It's something to consider for a guy who is supposedly such a sure thing. You can't really say his team didn't have other options with arguably the most talented roster in college basketball this year around him. How come he only averaged 1.5 assists against 2.5 TOs while drawing double and triple teams with NBA talent around him? For such a skilled player, why did he have so much trouble finishing in the paint at times this year? (1-7 against South Carolina, 1-7 against Florida, 3-7 against UCONN in the championship game). He started out the season looking great against weaker competition but nothing about his performance in tough conference games says dominant.
Remember Thomas Robinson had better numbers the year before the draft and very similar measurements with a longer wingspan. That was as a junior, but theoretically he should have been even more prepared to step in and have an impact. He led a less talented team to the championship game where he put up 18 and 17 in the loss. Robinson, by the way, also shot 39% on 93 shots in the tournament that year and we all ignored it. I'm not saying I don't like Randle at all, I think he's a very talented player. But the "can't miss" status is a little overblown at this point I think. There are legitimate questions to be asked about how his scoring abilities will translate at the next level.