I think Self is a poor NBA talent developer. The only products that have translated their potential to the NBA are: Deron Williams, Marcus Morris, Markieff Morris, Andrew Wiggins, and Joel Embiid. That's underwhelming for a coach who's pulled in elite recruiting classes for 15 years. He's an excellent college coach, but poor as a NBA talent developer. It feels like 1/2 of his guys drafted into the NBA are busts. I think success of players are more dependent on individual talent than Self's development. Self has a nice little spot with Roy Williams.I knew what your point was, I was just pulling your chain. I think the failures from Kansas have more to do with the individual player than they do the Kansas system. I think Self is very good at developing good college players, but maybe not necessarily good NBA players. The thing is, in the case of Robinson and McLemore, there were warning signs there. You look at the talent, and you decide how important those signs are. In McLemore's case, I thought he was worth the risk. Wasn't sure about Robinson though. When your undersized for your position, you have to be skilled. Robinson lacked some of those skills.
Athleticism is enough to make you a star in highschool. It will get you through college. But in the NBA, your going to struggle if that's all you have. That was Robinson's problem. Once in the NBA, and lacking skills, he needed to ba a super hustle guy, but to be really good at that, you have to be smart. Kenneth Faried is an example of an athletic undersized player, that is still a good player with hustle. Right now, Robinson is Faried light
Still can't believe his 2005 recruiting class. He recruited in 4 5 star prospects. Mario Chalmers, Brandon Rush, Julian Wright, and Michael Downs. Rush is probably the best out of that class, but he's a career bench player. Chalmers is extremely overrated. I think 100% of the reason why his career lasted longer than 2 years in the NBA is due to Miami's big 3.