These aren鈥檛 necessarily the best players in the country, though some are in that discussion. But let鈥檚 take a look at some guys who would be extremely hard to replace if they had to miss time due to injury or foul trouble.
Carsen Edwards, Purdue
Spoiler alert: Edwards is the most accomplished player on this list, and the only realistic Naismith candidate. He figures to put up monster numbers for a solid team. We don鈥檛 know how much Edwards will improve between his sophomore and junior year, but even if he stays about the same, he鈥檒l be much more important to the Boilermakers than he was last season. And he was crucial then.
Purdue loses Vince Edwards, Dakota Mathias, Isaac Haas and P.J. Thompson. That鈥檚 tough for a team that was kind of low on shot creation to begin with. Carsen Edwards used 28.7 percent of Purdue鈥檚 possessions last year, a top 100 individual mark. He could vault into the top 10 this year based on what the Boilermakers lost.
Nojel Eastern is an outstanding defender, but he鈥檚 raw offensively. Edwards is going to have to carry a heavy burden. The plus side? He鈥檚 awesome, so he鈥檒l put up awesome numbers. The down side for Purdue? It鈥檚 hard to win at the highest level with one true shot creator.
Oshae Brissett, Syracuse
Tyus Battle scores most of the points and earns the accolades, and he鈥檚 a great player. But Brissett is a star defensively, and Syracuse ranked fifth on that end last season. He鈥檚 tailor-made to play in Jim Boeheim鈥檚 2-3 zone; at 6-8 with long arms and great instincts, it鈥檚 unwise for foes to take challenge his size of the zone.
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He鈥檚 a work-in-progress offensively, but Brissett made great strides on that end last season. He averaged 14.9 points and 8.8 rebounds per game. Part of the reason Brissett is so valuable is because of Syracuse鈥檚 roster construction. The Orange have nobody else who can do what he does; taking him out of the lineup means the defense is significantly worse and the offense loses one more guy who can create a shot.
Brissett struggled with efficiency last season, but if he can improve his shot selection, he can become an all-ACC caliber player.
Jarrett Culver, Texas Tech
Texas Tech loses Keenan Evans, Zhaire Smith, Niem Stevenson and Zach Smith off of last year鈥檚 team that surprised the country and earned a 3-seed in the 草莓网站在线看 tournament. Culver is easily the best returning player.
He was comfortable as a third offensive option last season, but much more will be asked of him in 2018-19. Culver averaged 11.2 points and 4.8 rebounds on 45.5 percent shooting while making 38.2 percent of his 3s.
The Red Raiders鈥 roster doesn鈥檛 look great on paper. But we didn鈥檛 expect them to win nearly as much as they did last season; Chris Beard is a heck of a coach, and while this team may struggle offensively, he鈥檚 one of the best defensive strategists in the sport. Texas Tech will be able to prevent people from scoring.
The Red Raiders just need guys who can put the ball in the basket, and that鈥檚 where Culver excels. We鈥檒l see what he looks like with more responsibilities, but last season he demonstrated he could score from all three levels effectively. Look for him to break out.
Kamar Baldwin, Butler
Baldwin is quietly one of the best two-way players in the country, and last year, Butler relied heavily on him and Kelan Martin. Martin graduated, and Duke transfer Jordan Tucker hopes to replace him, but he won鈥檛 be eligible until second semester. Baldwin is going to get a ton of offensive work this season. Especially early on.
He averaged 15.7 points, 4.9 rebounds and 3.2 assists last season on good percentages. Baldwin could crack 20 points per game as a junior, but keep an eye on his assist and turnover numbers. He鈥檚 a gifted playmaker who can get sloppy with the ball at times. Butler will thrive if the ball is in Baldwin鈥檚 hands and he makes good decisions with it.
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We just talked a bunch about his offense, but Baldwin鈥檚 defense is his best skill. He made a made for himself by hounding the best perimeter players in the Big East as a freshman. Baldwin was still very good on that end as a sophomore, but perhaps didn鈥檛 make as many splash plays considering his offensive duties. He鈥檒l only get busier on that end. Keep an eye on what kind of energy he brings on defense, but when he鈥檚 locked in, he鈥檚 a pest.
Sagaba Konate, West Virginia
West Virginia allowed 98.2 points per 100 possessions last season. With Konate in the game, that number dipped to 93.4. He and Jevon Carter were the only two Mountaineers with sub-100 numbers. Konate was the common denominator in all of West Virginia鈥檚 best defensive lineups.
Look for that trend to continue this season.
Tremont Waters, LSU
One of the niftiest ball-handlers in the game, Waters is an acrobat at the point guard position. He鈥檚 a speedster who can contort his body in the lane and finish over bigger guys. His 3-point shot must be accounted for, too. Waters is the primary reason why LSU is ranked 23rd in the preseason AP Top 25.
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Waters is similar to Edwards but plays for a program that has less of track record of success. He鈥檒l be the driving offensive force of a team that will likely hover around the top 25 all year. His defense shouldn鈥檛 go unnoticed, either. Waters averaged two steals per game last season. Steals aren鈥檛 everything, and Waters strays out of scheme a little too often. Perhaps he can reel it in as a sophomore. But those takeaways lead to easy baskets, and if LSU is as good as AP voters think, Waters is in for a huge season. Nobody else on LSU is capable of doing what he does.
Markus Howard, Marquette
It鈥檚 remarkable that a 5-11 point guard who鈥檚 not particularly athletic or fast can average 20.4 points per game in the Big East. But that鈥檚 Howard. With Andrew Rowsey gone, he could approach 25 points per game as a junior.
There鈥檚 an argument to be made that Howard is the best shooter in the country. He made 54.7 percent of his 3s as a freshman and while that number dipped to 40.4 percent as a sophomore, 40.4 is still, you know, awesome. Especially for a guy who takes as difficult of shots as Howard does. He鈥檚 no standstill shooter. A bunch of those are pull-up attempts with a hand in the grill.
Rowsey was able to prop up the Marquette offense when Howard rested last season. But this is completely Howard鈥檚 show now. He鈥檚 playing with some talented frontcourt players, but the Golden Eagles鈥 backcourt is pretty barren aside from him.
Look for him to light up Big East defenses on some nights.