Locked On Jayhawks - Daily Podcast On Kansas Jayhawks Football & Basketball - Too-Early Starting Lineup and Minute Projections for Kansas Jayhawks Basketball in 2024-2025
Episode Date: July 8, 2024Too-early predictions of the 2024-2025 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball starting lineup / starting five. Minutes projections for Dajuan Harris, Zeke Mayo, Shakeel Moore, KJ Adams, Hunter Dickinson, AJ... Storr, Rylan Griffen, Flory Bidunga, Zach Clemence, Rakease Passmore and company under Bill Self and where could things change. Plus, what player battles could affect things the most as the offseason continues?Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!GametimeDownload the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDONCOLLEGE for $20 off your first purchase. Terms apply.eBay MotorsFrom brakes to exhaust kits and beyond, eBay Motors has over 122 million parts to keep your ride-or-die alive. With all the parts you need at the prices you want, it’s easy to bring home that big win. Keep your ride-or-die alive at EbayMotors.com. Eligible items only. Exclusions apply. eBay Guaranteed Fit only available to US customers.FanDuelFanDuel, America’s Number One Sportsbook. As playoffs wind down, the sports stop sporting like we want them to. But this summer, FanDuel is hooking up ALL CUSTOMERS with a boost or a bonus, DAILY! That’s right, there’s something for everyone, every day, all summer long! Visit FANDUEL.COMand add a big win to your summer bucket list!FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN)
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On today's Locked On Jayhawks, too early projection of the starting five and minutes rotation for Kansas Jayhawks basketball in 2024-25.
You are Locked On Jayhawks, your daily podcast on the Kansas Jayhawks.
Part of the Locked On Podcast Network, your team every day.
I'm Derek Johnson.
You can give me a follow on Twitter at DJohnsonRadio.
You can find our show, Locked On Jayhawks, anywhere you get your podcast,
including on our YouTube page where you can like and subscribe to the show.
And on today's edition of LOJ, we're talking Kansas basketball.
Two early projections for the starting lineup, the minute allocation,
and where the biggest competitions are going to come in on as we finish up the offseason here and then head into the start
of the school year before they get going with, I guess, exhibition games coming in late October.
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All right, so we're going to start with this,
the starting five projections, starting lineup projection,
then we'll get into our minutes projection for everything
as part of the rotation and where some of the biggest changes
could possibly come as part of this.
So I guess just ripping the Band-Aid off.
My starting lineup projection, DeJuan Harris at the point guard.
Shocking there, right?
Hunter Dickinson at the
five. Those seem like the two kind of locks as a part of all of this. I guess I would throw AJ
Storr in as a lock as well. I mean, he was second team All-Big Ten a season ago. He would have been
back at Wisconsin this year. He's preseason All-Big Ten first team. He might be preseason All-Big 12
first team this year. If not, he certainly is in that conversation.
And yeah, I think those guys are pretty much locked to be in the starting lineup.
I think if Kansas would have gone out and added another player like a Jackson Robinson,
who they were at least, I don't know, kicking the can on a little bit,
or one of these other big players, then maybe it would be more of a conversation.
But the other two guys like Ryland Griffin and KJ Adams feel like, yeah, they're probably going to start.
If you're in the camp of, hey, Bill Self doesn't relinquish guys from being starters from the year before,
then KJ Adams would be a lock for you.
Maybe you would even, if you're on the opposite side of that, that you just think they're completely overhauling things,
you would be open to the idea of DeJuan starting with Rylan Griffin,
AJ Stork, KJ Adams, Hunter Dickinson, and then Zeke Mayo,
or Shaquille Moore or something like that as the fifth guy.
And that is entirely possible,
but I'm going to lean to the side of Bill Self trusting the veteran
and the guy that he knows how to do.
And I will say, as much as it can be a little bit of a concern,
and it certainly will be questioned coming into the season,
how well Kansas can play with the two bigs with KJ next to Hunter with KJ,
not being a shooter.
The offense worked a lot better when Hunter Dickinson was hitting threes at
the beginning of the season.
You don't expect him to hit 50 to 60%,
which is what he's hitting the beginning of last year.
But like he went from being 50 to 60% to being like,
it was what like a two of 30 stretch or something like that.
If he can just level out and be the good shooter, you know, the above average, whatever it is for
the rest of the way, like that consistency will help. Plus you have better shooters all around,
more consistent shooters on the court. Besides that, I think there'll be able to make it work,
but maybe it does come with a little less minutes. And maybe though, this is a conversation
of the starting five at the beginning of the season will be different than the starting five come January or February, right?
Like maybe the conversation of the starting five now is KJ Adams,
and you tip him that nod as the veteran to have his starting spot at the beginning of the year.
But you're going to throw out lineups, even if your starting five is that lineup.
There's going to be certain lineups during the game where you do play, you know,
an AJ Storr at the four with Rylan Griffin at the three and Shaquille Moore,
Zeke Mayo at the two or Keith Passmore at the two slash three and Griffin at
the other one and store at the four. Right. And if those lineups,
one of those lineups ends up just being by far your best lineup.
And like,
it's pretty apparent to the coaching staff and the players and everything.
Like eventually there will hit a period. It could be like January. It could be February, I don't know, it could be March, where they will just say,
okay, we're going to go this direction with maybe our starting five or this direction more often
during the game. Now, then again, the starting lineup is more of a nod, like you could start
someone and they could play 15 minutes per game. It's more about who finishes the game and plays
those more minutes. And that is the more important thing. But yeah, DeJuan Harris, Ryland Griffin,
AJ Storr, KJ Adams, Hunter Dickinson, to me, that plays those more minutes. And that is the more important thing. But yeah, Dwan Harris, Ryland Griffin, AJ store,
KJ Adams,
Hunter Dickinson.
To me,
that feels like a very strong possibility.
That is the starting lineup.
Like I said,
that would have more had a wrench in it.
Had they brought in kind of another big player into all this to where the
question would have come.
I do think the biggest question though,
does come down to how do you want to play ideally and what's going to be the
best style of play.
And like I said,
even if you are starting this lineup, where does your best play come?
Does it come with KJ and Hunter playing next to each other?
Does it come with AJ Storr at the four or something like that, right?
Like where do the most minutes come from, even if the starting lineup is one way or another?
And so I think though with DeJuan, Rylan Griffin, AJ Stork,
KJ Adams, Hunter Dickinson, like if I were to look at who has the best chance of if that situation did happen, like I said, where all of a sudden you get to January or February and you're talking
about a different starting five and Bill Self shakes things up a little bit, I think the most
likely situation would be just that. It would be that you've decided, hey, this two-big basketball thing doesn't work as well.
We're going to have KJ coming off the bench.
We're going to start store at the four.
And then I think it would be probably either Shaquille Moore or Zeke Mayo who would be that other starter for you.
Probably cases for both guys.
I mean, with Zeke Mayo, the better shooter.
And if you're taking KJ Adams off the floor, you know, to be a starter later in the season for the idea of having more shooting,
makes sense to go for the better shooter, which would probably be Zeke Mayo.
And that would be my favorite in that regard.
But Shaquille Moore could make sense too, because I think Shaquille Moore and DeJuan Harris
for whatever minutes they're on the floor together is going to be one of the best
defensive backcourts in the country when they're on the court next to each other.
And there is some real appeal to that.
But this does feel more knocked down that it is
Dewan, Ryland Griffin, AJ Stork, KJ Adams and Hunter Dickinson if Zeke Mayo ends up being this
unbelievable score similar to what he was in his previous stops but he transfers that over to the
power five level it might be hard to leave that guy out of the starting five I do think there is
that natural jump in competition though going from the Summit League to the Big five. I do think there is that natural jump in competition though, going from the summit league to the big 12. And I don't really have questions about Zeke Mayo having to
make that jump from an offensive perspective, from a shooting the basketball perspective,
maybe from a, I don't know, consistently creating against more athletic, better defenders,
but because he's on a Kansas team with all these other great players, he might not be drawing the
number one, number two perimeter defender on the other team each and every night.
The bigger question there becomes, what is Zeke Mayo going to look like on the defensive
side of the basketball court?
And that kind of becomes the question of where he kind of fits into all of this.
But yeah, starting five, Harris, Griffin, Stort, Adams, and Dickinson.
Let's get into the minute projections, who all I think can be a part of the rotation
on this episode
of Locked on Jayhawks.
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All right, continuing on on Locked on Jayhawks,
and thank you to the everydayers tuning in to each and every episode of the show.
We will be joined by Nick Schwert later this week,
and we'll have a Big 12 Media Days takeaway episode later this week, too.
So we're getting into the rotation projection for KU.
So if you remember, we go back to last week, and thank you to the everydayers
if you did tune in to this one, where we had the conversation about
how deep does Bill Self typically go into his rotation.
We showed you the chart that had each and every year how deep he went.
And obviously it depended, did you view it by total minutes, games played, minutes per game?
Did you depend on the regular season versus the NCAA tournament?
There were different ways to look at it.
But basically we came to the conclusion that there were some years that he maybe did go even 10 deep, just kind of touching it.
But for the most part, it was seven to eight deep.
But there even were some other years where it was nine deep.
And something we talked about last week, too, is it's easy to every offseason hype up the idea that each and every one of these players that I like,
that, you know, you watched their high school mixtape or you saw what they did at the previous stop from the transfer portal.
You liked their game and then they ended up happening to enter the transfer portal and come to Kansas.
And you get under the idea that each and every one of these players is going to be the fullest version of themselves that you're expecting them to.
And that just doesn't happen.
And so you think back.
I always think back,
two years ago, you bring in Grady Dick and MJ Rice,
two McDonald's All-American wings.
One doesn't play for you.
One ends up killing it and becoming a first-round draft pick, right?
And so it almost is a little bit of a dart throw there.
The point being is, like, on paper, I like all these players' game guys.
I like Shaquille Moore.
I like Zeke Mayo.
I like Ricky's Passmore.
I like Flory Badunga and Zach Clements and, you know, all these guys, chances are not all of them are
going to hit at once. So it's easy to be like, oh, they're 10 deep, they're 11 deep. Well,
what happens if, you know, this player's just not ready or this player's just not a good defender
and you end up being closer to seven deep. So that could absolutely happen. And I remain open
to that. For now, I'm projecting a nine manman rotation, and I have a 10th man getting spot
minutes. Usually, it's like if it's an eight-man rotation, ninth man's getting spot minutes. So
that's kind of how I have this working here. So as far as the minutes go, like I said,
DeJuan Harris, Ryland Griffin, AJ Stork, KJ Adams, Hunter Dickinson, those are the starting five.
I think Zeke Mayo, Shaquille Moore, Flory Badunga, all part of the rotation. Now,
if you wanted to swap in Zach Clements, you think he's going to beat out Flory Badunga, all part of the rotation. Now, if you wanted to swap in Zach Clements,
you think he's going to beat out Flory Badunga for the back of five minutes,
I'm totally – I'd be very amenable to that, I guess,
would be the way of putting it.
And then I have Rakeese Passmore as the ninth guy,
who heard a lot of good things about how that's kind of translating over.
But I have DeJuan playing all of his minutes at the point guard spot,
giving you 32 minutes per game at the point guard spot.
And I think this is an interesting one with DeJuan
because we heard last year on Bill Self,
I think it was during a Hawk Talk.
It might have been during a press conference.
And he kind of talked about how DeJuan was best served being like,
I think he's a 28 to 30 minute per game player.
Maybe it was 28 to 32 minute per game player.
Most often, guys that come back to school
end up averaging more minutes per game for Kansas and under Bill Self.
And that's been the case for DeJuan his entire career.
He went from 16 minutes per game to 29 minutes per game to 34.2 to 35.7.
So this would be a bit of a step back, but we have seen it before.
And I think because DeJuan is at his best when he, like, this is what I think basically Bill Self was saying
when he was saying he's best at 28 to 30 or 32 minutes per game,
is the idea that he has more
energy to be that pest defender which is when he makes his biggest impact because he's not a dynamic
scorer so he has to be a good distributor and a good defender and last year you know he wasn't
the same defender I think he was still overall a good defender for you but the year before he was
big 12 defensive player of the year and I think there was a difference. And I think that's the hope you get back to this year.
So honestly, I have DeJuan at 32. You can convince me it's going to be 30, but after
Marco Jackson went down and that was one possible less ball handler for you, I bumped this back up
to 32. Ryland Griffin, I have playing 28 minutes. I think he gets some of those at the two. I think
he gets some of those at the three, pretty self-explanatory there. Maybe he gets a few
minutes here or there at the four.
I don't know.
A.J. Storr, I have him getting 30 minutes.
And honestly, with Griffin, you can convince me that's going to be north of 28.
That's going to be 30, 32, because if his three-point shooting carries over
and you really need that.
With A.J. Storr, same thing.
Like, if we're talking, what I said here is I have this out as a nine-man rotation.
A very real chance that Bill Self just says, no, screw this. we're going with like a seven-man rotation and an eighth guy's getting
spot minutes or eight-man rotation and ninth guy's getting spot minutes and then you get a few extra
minutes for Rylan Griffin you get a few extra minutes for AJ Storr like we see Bill Self do
that all the time but I think Storr plays the three for you I think he plays the four for you
there's not a ton of options for KU to play the four like realistically it's okay you have KJ
AJ Storr can play there Storr hasn't been a great rebounder though KU to play the four. Like realistically, it's okay. You have KJ, AJ Storr can play there.
Storr hasn't been a great rebounder though.
So that'll be the big question here.
Griffin could play there, but you know, he's a little more slight.
Like that's not the most ideal thing in the world.
I mean, you could play two big basketball with either Flory or Zach.
Zach makes more sense from the offensive perspective to play that way.
Flory makes more sense to play that way from the defensive perspective,
but I don't think either one is super great.
But I think because of that, it does make Storr play a good amount of four minutes
that does leave open more minutes for kind of the rest of the rotation
at that point guard, shooting guard, and small forward spots.
And then I have KJ playing 27 minutes.
And this is another one where, honestly, like the KJ Adams minutes
is the biggest mystery in the world to me. I have have him starting and I feel good that he's going to be
a starter at this point in time as I kind of talked about earlier I don't have a great idea
of where his minutes are going to be he averaged 27.3 minutes per game in his second year he
averaged 33.4 minutes per game a season ago now last year's team obviously wasn't very deep and
they had even less options to play the four if If you, if you really kind of think about it there. Also, you go back to the minute
per game total two years ago, if you were using that as the floor, that was him playing the center.
So this is, this is again, very different. You could convince me KJ is playing 22 minutes per
game. You could convince me he's still going to play like 30, 32, just because Bill self trusts
him. And he tends to play those guys a lot. So honestly, the 27, that's the one that I feel like is the
biggest guest. Like with the one you could convince me it's within two minutes, it's 30
to 34, right? With Ryland Griffin, you could convince me it's 26 to 30 or 32 or something
with AJ store between 28 and 32. I think all of those will be relatively close. The KJ one,
I don't know. I think it's a very wide range.
And then you have Hunter Dickinson in there too, who I have at 28 minutes.
All of those playing at the five, same way I have all of KJ's minutes coming at the four.
Again, this is one for Hunter that I think was probably conservative,
that you look at Hunter, he's somebody who could play 32 minutes a night for KU and Bill Self.
But I think in the same vein of what Bill Self said about DeJuan Harris,
I think makes a lot of sense with Hunter Dickinson.
If he's only playing 28 minutes per night as opposed to 32, and I know it doesn't sound
like that big of a difference.
Like these are 22 year olds, there's four extra minutes and I don't know, it might like
every extra minute kind of counts like where you're not exerting yourself for that one
extra break you can have in the game means that next five minutes you go out there is extra exertion. And to try to help on the defensive end of the court there,
which is kind of the big question for KU playing 100 against in at the five, I think it helps a
ton if he is more energetic and has that. And over the course of the season, right, if you're playing,
let's say 40 games, let's say you kind of play your max there, four extra minutes per game,
the difference playing 28 to 32 minutes per game
that's 160 minutes which that is the difference of like five extra games that you put on your body so
it does add up a little bit there if you're talking over the course of the entire season
um but again that's one that you can convince me it's going to be a few more minutes i went with 28
um under the idea that florida was going to be ready to go or that it leaves a little bit of open minutes for spot minutes
that we gave to Zach Clements.
Obviously, with El Marco, medical redshirt.
I gave Jamari McDowell a regular redshirt.
Maybe that doesn't end up happening since you really only have
the 11 scholarship guys.
And so with Jamari McDowell, if you redshirted, you would only have 10.
So maybe that doesn't end up happening.
Then again, maybe the fact that you added Noah Shelby,
who isn't a scholarship player but was a scholarship player past colleges,
like maybe that makes you more amenable to do it.
And then as far as the backup spots, we're going Zeke Mayo,
getting a few minutes at the backup point guard spot
and then getting minutes at the backup too.
I honestly, I think what will end up happening,
I have it listed on here that Zeke Mayo and Shaquille Moore
each get backup point guard minutes. I don't think that'll end up happening i have it listed on here that uh zeke mayo and shaquille moore each
get back a point guard minutes i don't think that'll end up happening i think what will
realistically end up happening is one of those two zeke mayo or shaquille moore one of the two
gets all of the backup point guard minutes and then plays some two minutes and then the other
one just plays two minutes right so it kind of just heads the bet there but i think the minutes
still could end up you know reasonably similar so we'll see who wins the backup point guard.
I think Zeke Mayo has better like assist numbers throughout his career,
but maybe because of his shooting,
like it makes more sense to just play him as a two man.
I don't know.
Honestly,
it doesn't matter that much.
Like both probably would bring the ball up the floor,
but I have Zeke playing 21 minutes per game.
That's one where I also like,
if you're talking bench players
that's probably the one where it has the biggest question mark for me um if Zeke is struggling on
the defensive side of the ball like so Nick Timberlake still ended up playing a good amount
of minutes per game he obviously ended up starting during the NCAA tournament because the Kevin
McCuller injury but if KU would have been deeper last season, like let's say Artario Morris didn't have all the off-the-court stuff happen
and he would have ended up being the player Bill Self wanted him to be
and was probably playing 25, 30 minutes a night.
That minutes had to come somewhere.
It's probably shaving minutes off, A, El Marco,
and B, Nick Timberlake because of the defense, right?
And so what happens if Shaquille Moore is really good
and then you're playing AJ Storm, Rylan Griffin a ton of minutes,
like Zeke Mayo, what if he did get trimmed down
to 12 to 15 minutes
if Bill Suff doesn't totally trust his defense?
But then again, what if Zeke Mayo's offense
and his three-point scoring and his creation is so good
that he could also play 26 minutes per night
or something like that?
Like that wouldn't surprise me either.
So we're at 21 there.
Shaquille Moore, I mentioned before,
wouldn't be surprised if he played
that kind of Roderick Stewart role
where Roderick Stewart was giving you like I think it was like 11 to 12
minutes per game for the national title team as kind of a another athletic guard that you could
throw out there now when I when I made that comment um I don't think I had fully gone into
the rotation possibilities for Kansas because after the Marco Jackson injury,
and obviously Shaquille ended up joining after Marco's injury,
but there's just not as many ball handlers as I thought on the team,
right?
It's Dwan Zeke and Shaquille Moore in terms of like true ball handlers.
So again,
with Shaquille's defense,
like that's the interesting part here.
I think in a vacuum,
Zeke Mayo better player than Shaquille Moore,
but what does Bill self-trust? He trusts defense and he loves
athleticism too. I think Shaquille Moore is the more athletic player. I think Shaquille Moore is
the better defender. Is there a case that Zeke Mayo and Shaquille Moore's minutes swap here?
I think that could happen, but it all just depends on how the off-season competition goes.
I'm still going Zeke Mayo ahead of him because I'm a big Zeke Mayo fan
and everything, but I guess I would leave that open
to interpretation and possibility.
So I have Shaquille Moore playing 13,
and then I have Rakeese Passmore playing about eight minutes on the wing.
Again, you can see that's going to be 10 to 12.
I definitely think Rakeese Passmore is going to show a lot of good highlights
and ceiling and everything.
It's just hard to play a ton of minutes when you look at KU
giving a ton of wing minutes to Ryland Griffin, AJ Storen, and KJ Adams there.
And then Flory, Badunga, I have them playing the backup center minutes.
You can convince me that's just going to be all 12 if we had Hunter playing 28,
but I just used eight for Flory.
Maybe that's closer to 10, and then that left about four spot minutes per game,
which over the course of a season, as we talked about earlier, that's 160 minutes.
So it might not necessarily be four minutes per game, which over the course of a season, as we talked about earlier, that's 160 minutes. So it might not necessarily be four minutes per game. It could be you play eight minutes this game and then you don't play the next game, right? It could be you play 12 minutes this
game and then you don't play the next two games, right? It's just kind of how that stuff works out.
I like to leave a little bit of room for spot minutes because there just always are spot minutes
over the course of a season. All right, let's finish up here with the biggest competitions
and what could be some of the biggest, I guess,
wrenches that could be thrown into this
and what could possibly change some of the rotation numbers
on Locked on Jayhawks.
Finishing things up here with Locked on Jayhawks,
what are some of the biggest changes, competition changes,
that can most affect that projected rotation for me? And we will have another projected rotation
before the season starts once we get, I guess, more intel or whatever's happening, whether it's
late night in the fog or some of the bootcamp stuff and others that are going on during the
preseason for KU. I definitely think one thing to keep an eye, like it feels like to me, there's, there's a couple
strings pulling on each other. Okay. And, and Rakeesh Passmore, Zeke Mayo and Shaquille Moore.
I know Passmore's more of a wing and Zeke Mayo, maybe more of a, I guess Zeke and Moore both
kind of combo guards, but it feels like to me that competition is going to be very interesting.
Again, it isn't necessarily that you play the same position,
but if you think about it, all of them could be asked to do similar things,
which is like space the floor a little bit.
I don't know.
Maybe it's more reserved for Zeke that he's more of the spacer
and the other guys are trying to be athletes and go defenders.
But like when you're a role player, which is what they're going to be asked to do,
because the star players for KU,
the go-to options are going to be Hunter Dickinson
and AJ Storer and Ryland Griffin.
And, you know, DeJuan Harris is going to be
setting people up and stuff.
And KJ will just kind of fill in in another way.
But the go-to options, if you're Zeke Mayo on the floor,
you might be the fourth option on the floor.
If you're Ricky's Passmore,
you might be the fifth option on the floor.
Right, right, whatever it ends up being.
And again, maybe it's different with Zeke because
he's so good on offense, but point being you have to play a certain role. And so that just comes
down to who wins out those competitions among those players. And so what if Ricky's past more
is just by far the best of them? I think that affects the minutes of those other two guys.
Same with Zeke Mayo or Shaquille Moore. I think there's
a bit of a tugging between all three of those players, and that just adjusts to how you want
to play. If Rakees ends up being the best player, you play more wings, right? If it's Zeke Mayo,
you're playing more two-guard lineups. If it's Shaquille Moore, you're playing more two-guard
lineups. So I think that competition there, you almost view it as, okay, I had 21 minutes for
Zeke Mayo, I had 13 for Shaquke Mayo, had 13 for Shkill Moore,
I had eight for Ricky Spassmore.
That's 42 minutes total, right, for the three.
Maybe if you want to call it 45 just to kind of round up a little bit.
45 minutes between the three of them combined.
How does that get sorted out in the competition?
Then what about Zach Clements versus Flory Badunga?
Obviously that is a real competition, but I think more so than that,
does Zach Clements play minutes at the four?
And I'm not just talking like spot minutes here or there. Does that become a real rotation thing
for KU? Because if he is playing minutes at the four, it changes the rotation, I think,
a little bit to where you can get Zach maybe double-digit minutes per game. If he beats out
Floyd Badunga for the backup center minutes and you want to play him a handful of minutes per
game at the four, maybe he can get 15 minutes per game so that becomes interesting in in how Bill Self
wants to utilize Zach Clements is he only a five or is he a four and uh I think the last one here
is what happens if KU is just much better with like AJ Store playing the four and that's something
we talked about earlier in the starting lineup question how does that affect the way Bill Self
wants to play how does that affect the minutes does Self wants to play? How does that affect the minutes?
Does KJ's minutes go down?
Does Storr's minutes go up?
All that sort of stuff.
How does that affect it?
And I guess the flip to that is what if the KJ Adams minutes
are the best minutes on the floor for KU?
Then does it restrict AJ Storr playing less minutes at the four?
Now he's playing more minutes at the three.
Now Rylan Griffin's playing more minutes at the two.
Now there's less minutes on those guys, Shaquille Moore and Zeke Mayo.
So I think those are kind of the biggest questions and competitions to look
forward to through the rest of the off season for KU.
That'll do it for this episode of Locked on Jayhawks.
You can find our show anywhere you get your podcast,
including on our YouTube page.
Make sure you're subscribed.
And we have a few teams left.
We're mostly filled up,
but if you're interested in going to this trivia event,
which is coming up on Sunday, July 21st,
so two weeks from yesterday.
That's happening at Johnny's in West Lawrence.
A couple teams still left to register for a KU basketball trivia event
at Johnny's West.
So come on out to that and, yeah, hit me up.
It's on my Twitter, at DJohnsonRadio, where you can find out info more on that.
All right, see you next time with Locked on Jayhawks.