"The biggest hole for each national championship contender" - ESPN
Jeff Borzello, ESPN Staff Writer
Posted: 01/02/18
"If the first two months of the college basketball season have shown us anything, it's that no team is perfect -- or even close to perfect, in fact. For the first time since at least 1948 (when the Associated Press began doing college basketball polls), every Division I team had at least one loss before January.
Some would consider Michigan State, Duke and Villanova a step above the rest of the country, but that group includes a team that lost to Boston College and one that allowed 101 points and 68.2 percent shooting from the 3-point line in a loss to Butler. Michigan State hasn't played a top-100 BPI team since November, so while the Spartans are clearly very good, they still have something to prove.
But if each potential title contender could get some help immediately, what would it be?
1. Michigan State Spartans: Limiting turnovers
2. Duke Blue Devils: Shot-blocking rim protection
3. Arizona State Sun Devils: Size and depth up front
4. Villanova Wildcats: Return to health
5. Xavier Musketeers: Better man-to-man defense
6. Oklahoma Sooners: Consistent supporting cast for Trae Young
7. North Carolina Tar Heels: Bona fide third option on offense
8. Purdue Boilermakers: Bench scoring
9. Arizona Wildcats: Consistency defensively and at point guard
10. Texas A&M Aggies: A full roster
11. Wichita State Shockers: Healthy Markis McDuffie - The Shockers have had a few slip-ups this season but are still the American Athletic Conference favorite and will be expected to win a few games in March. But they need McDuffie back and fully healthy. McDuffie returned in late December, playing in two games after missing the first month of the season with a stress fracture in his left foot. McDuffie only played a combined 25 minutes in his first two games, going 2-for-10 from the floor and scoring seven points. The 6-8 forward led Wichita in scoring and rebounding last season and was named first-team All-Missouri Valley. He helps at both ends of the floor, and Gregg Marshall needs that boost.
12. Kansas Jayhawks: Frontcourt reinforcements to actually play
13. West Virginia Mountaineers: Esa Ahmad
14. Virginia Cavaliers: Aggressive perimeter playmaker
15. Kentucky Wildcats: Perimeter shooting..."
Jeff Borzello, ESPN Staff Writer
Posted: 01/02/18
"If the first two months of the college basketball season have shown us anything, it's that no team is perfect -- or even close to perfect, in fact. For the first time since at least 1948 (when the Associated Press began doing college basketball polls), every Division I team had at least one loss before January.
Some would consider Michigan State, Duke and Villanova a step above the rest of the country, but that group includes a team that lost to Boston College and one that allowed 101 points and 68.2 percent shooting from the 3-point line in a loss to Butler. Michigan State hasn't played a top-100 BPI team since November, so while the Spartans are clearly very good, they still have something to prove.
But if each potential title contender could get some help immediately, what would it be?
1. Michigan State Spartans: Limiting turnovers
2. Duke Blue Devils: Shot-blocking rim protection
3. Arizona State Sun Devils: Size and depth up front
4. Villanova Wildcats: Return to health
5. Xavier Musketeers: Better man-to-man defense
6. Oklahoma Sooners: Consistent supporting cast for Trae Young
7. North Carolina Tar Heels: Bona fide third option on offense
8. Purdue Boilermakers: Bench scoring
9. Arizona Wildcats: Consistency defensively and at point guard
10. Texas A&M Aggies: A full roster
11. Wichita State Shockers: Healthy Markis McDuffie - The Shockers have had a few slip-ups this season but are still the American Athletic Conference favorite and will be expected to win a few games in March. But they need McDuffie back and fully healthy. McDuffie returned in late December, playing in two games after missing the first month of the season with a stress fracture in his left foot. McDuffie only played a combined 25 minutes in his first two games, going 2-for-10 from the floor and scoring seven points. The 6-8 forward led Wichita in scoring and rebounding last season and was named first-team All-Missouri Valley. He helps at both ends of the floor, and Gregg Marshall needs that boost.
12. Kansas Jayhawks: Frontcourt reinforcements to actually play
13. West Virginia Mountaineers: Esa Ahmad
14. Virginia Cavaliers: Aggressive perimeter playmaker
15. Kentucky Wildcats: Perimeter shooting..."
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