By Joel Welser
Purdue Boilermakers
Big Ten Conference
2009-10: 29-6, 14-4
2009-10 postseason: NCAA
Coach: Matt Painter (112-56 at Purdue, 137-61 overall)
When Robbie Hummel was out with a knee injury, Purdue struggled. During that stretch, they went 5-3. Half of their losses came during that short time without Hummel. That is how important he is to this team. All looked well with Hummel healthy at the start of practice. However, that did not last long as he re-tore his ACL the following day and will miss the entire 2010-2011 campaign. Purdue hoped to make a Final Four run and looked poised to do so, but that is not likely the case anymore.
Key Losses: G Keaton Grant, G Chris Kramer
Key Newcomers:
What Hummel’s injury does do is puts a lot of pressure on incoming freshman Travis Carroll and redshirt freshmen Sandi Marcius. At 6-9 and 247 pounds, Carroll has the size and strength to make an impact as a freshman. He is not a typical bruiser in the paint, but he is a good passer and at least has enough size to fill in some minutes. Marcius has a little more potential after sitting out last season with a broken foot. He is a big body at 6-9 and 260 pounds and will have to play some quality minutes. The backcourt newcomers were getting most of the hype prior to Hummel’s injury. Terone Johnson is a superb point guard who will be running this team in the years to come, but Anthony Johnson is a great shooter who can provide a spark off the bench right away.
Backcourt:
Even without Hummel, Purdue has some very talented players. E’Twaun <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 />
Frontcourt:
The star of the frontcourt is JaJuan Johnson. After flirting with the NBA, the 6-10, 220 pounder opted to return to
Who to Watch:
Lewis Jackson broke his foot last season and that really neutralized his speed for the rest of the season. Now healthy,
Final Projection:
Assuming Jackson or Barlow will not suddenly become shooters, this team needs to find somebody to compliment
Projected Post-season Tournament: NCAA
Projected Starting Five:
Lewis Jackson, Junior, Guard, 2.4 ppg
Ryne Smith, Junior, Guard, 2.6 ppg
E’Twaun Moore, Senior, Guard, 16.4 ppg
Patrick Bade, Sophomore, Forward, 1.5 ppg
JaJuan Johnson, Senior, Center, 15.5 ppg