So here's whats fascinating about your 4 questions regarding Lincoln. And indicating why the college D1 basketball game has become so boring. Because so much of the recruiting and evaluation has become about physical measurable, and very little about simply putting the ball in the hoop and playing the game.Every state outside of the CA's and TX's and FL's thinks that their in-state school does a bad job of recruiting local talent.
When fans see college level talent playing against local high school talent, it's easy to overestimate how that ability will translate to the next level.
Some of the questions I have looking at Lincoln and his frame (I have no dog in this fight):
1. What position can he guard?
2. How well does he move laterally?
3. How much weight can he put on & maintain his athleticsm?
4. What spots is he most effective offensively? Can he play on the perimeter or be a hybrid 4 in small ball lineups?
A lot of times these guys at the 6'4-6'7 ranges are tweeners who are too slow to guard on the perimeter but too light to guard on the block. We've seen this with guys Trav has brought in from out-of-state. Not a Montana issue, just a general challenge for projecting high school pontential.
Historically, guys from Montana that have played at UM (and beyond) have been offered by other D1s. Samuelson, Kendal, Tinks, Rollie, Brendon Howard. MT high school guys now have more opportunities to play on the circuit than ever, in front of hundreds of coaches and have more visibility than ever before. On the girl's side, we're seeing multiple Montana athletes go to Eastern, Gonzaga, Stanford, receive offers from Idaho, etc. So there's not an issue with out-of-state coaches recruiting Montana players.
I'm not saying Lincoln isn't a D1 guy, he looks to have the size and skill to contribute at a Montana or MSU eventually. I think we're seeing D1's less and less take HS guys because if they don't play, they leave, if they play, they leave.
It seems like most schools are taking the wait and see approach - where guys go to lower levels to actually play, and if they're good enough, they'll transfer up. There's no more of the old school red-shirt, sit as a freshman, play limited minutes as a sophomore, then contribute as a junior - senior season trajectory.
But Lincoln specifically does have great athleticism. To me, hes a more refined skill and athleticism version of Josh Bannon. Not quite as tall or as big, but he has a ton of room to add strength to his frame. Id say hes perfect fit for the 3 spot. He plays above the rim as well as anyone for the griz currently, and shoots it very well (hit game winning 3 at the AA title game).
Basketball isn't only physical measurable. The guard for Idaho, from CDA, is 6'1" 170lbs. He lit us up in the Big sky chipper. Because he could get the ball in the hoop. Great shooter, could attack the rim etc.