Garza Vs Niang

CloneinWDSM

Well-Known Member
Aug 9, 2013
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Started to have the argument in a group chat with Hawks and Clones.

Between the two, who had a more successful college career. For arguments sake, let’s say Iowa makes it to a Sweet 16 and loses.
 
  • Dumb
Reactions: Frak
Started to have the argument in a group chat with Hawks and Clones.

Between the two, who had a more successful college career. For arguments sake, let’s say Iowa makes it to a Sweet 16 and loses.
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Garza has to lead them to a really really deep run this year for this to even be a conversation. Otherwise it’s just hawk fans with big heads and recency bias.
 
I mean really, take off the ketchup and mustard glasses for once. Garza is about to win the Wooden award, after coming in 2nd last year. I think it’s safe to say he was a better collegiate player than Niang, even if it makes your butts hurt so bad.
This is the main reason I think you have to give the nod to Garza

BUT

I think college basketball as a whole is considerably down even from the Niang era. Not sure what it is but I just haven't been able to get into college basketball this year, and I have been able to be a huge college basketball fan the past few years where ISU struggled, so it's not that.

Garza will win the award, deservedly so, but there are really no other stars in college basketball this year
 
  • Agree
Reactions: CycloneRulzzz
I had this realization over the weekend...

Do you realize how lucky Iowa is to have Garza and what a unicorn that guy is? He is an amazing college player with very low NBA potential. He threads that needle as well as about anyone in recent memory. How hard is it to be a two-time POY contender yet not even be projected in the first round?

So, Iowa gets the best of both worlds. A really good player who also sticks around all 4 years because his draft stock is so bad.
 
Georges will probably have more NBA years. Luka will probably make more money (turned down a million alone on shoe deal last year).





So, I'll go with Aaron White. Played for a National Championship against Baylor then went on to get the elusive double European-NBA paycheck.
 

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