Pick any year since the 1997 National Championship excluding the 2001 loss in the NCAA final to Duke. The team has been riddled with future NBA starters and All-stars for decades now with only a few deep tounament finishes.
Basketball - 3 Answers
People's Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
Answer 1 :
They have the right body types for the NBA. Or most of them do. They definitely choose the right kids out of High School. I Think they are taught to have a great work ethic. They dont do well in the NCAA because they arent consistent enough. Watch out for Chase Buddinger he will turn heads in the NBA. 40+ vertical leap. Amazing and he's 6'6.
Answer 2 :
it has to do with correct development. the coach is possibly not utilizing the player correctly, and these NBA coaches get to watch 3-4 years of this player to notice things or nuances that other coaches might not notice. this applies to college football > pros. plenty of players passed by good schools go to second rate universities and then spank the competition in the combine/pros because of the coach.
Answer 3 :
Probably because Arizona is usually stacked and a lot of their "athletes" are more role players than superstars on their team. Their players have good foundations are usually solid defenders and once they get into a pro-system. Also you don't see Arizona having as many "one and dones" as other schools so it can also be the years of College Experience. This is from a UCLA fan who wishes a lot of the Arizona players would leave early year after year. Nickster
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