Wisconsin Basketball Player Preview: Charlie Thomas

Da-news-now

RSS Reporter
Reporter
Member
Messages
5,409
Reaction score
311
The Wisconsin Basketball season is right around the corner, so I’m taking a look at every scholarship player on the roster. Here are the links for the first nine.

  1. Bronson Koenig
  2. Zak Showalter
  3. Nigel Hayes
  4. Vitto Brown
  5. Ethan Happ
  6. Khalil Iverson
  7. Jordan Hill
  8. Alex Illikainen
  9. D’Mitrik Trice

    Now, sophomore bruiser Charlie Thomas.
2015-16 Season Recap


It was a tale of two seasons for freshman forward Charlie Thomas. When he arrived at Madison, he was penciled into the rotation immediately do to his size (6 foot 8, 253 pounds) and physicality. He had the body to bang with Big Ten big men right away. Under Bo Ryan, Thomas was consistently one of the first two (and sometimes only two) players off the bench.

Thomas was a phenomenal rebounder and played tough, physical post defense. However, he struggled mightily on the offense end. He only averaged 2.4 points, and was very inefficient. He shot 37% from the field, 27% from 3-point range, and 47% from the line. For that reason, when Greg Gard took over as head coach, he saw his playing time drastically decrease.

Burning Questions

1. Can he improve his shooting?


Thomas is someone Wisconsin needs on the court. He is strong, tough, physical, and a good athlete. He is also a stellar rebounder. But none of that will matter if he can’t improve his shooting. He needs to be a threat to score, or defenses will be able to focus on Wisconsin’s other players, hurting the spacing and flow of the offense.

If Thomas is able to add a consistent mid-range jump shot or become a solid post presence, he will see a lot of playing time. If he continues to be an offensive liability, he will see limited action, and may even be overtaken by fellow sophomore Andy Van Vliet on the depth chart.

498776570.jpg

MADISON, WI – NOVEMBER 25: Charlie Thomas #15 of the Wisconsin Badgers celebrates after making two points during the second half against the Prairie View Panthers at Kohl Center on November 25, 2015 in Madison, Wisconsin. (Photo by Mike McGinnis/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Charlie Thomas
Season Outlook


Even though Thomas won’t suddenly become a prolific scorer, his shooting will likely improve just enough to keep him on the court. Even if it doesn’t, he is still one of the best rebounders and post defenders Wisconsin has. He will certainly be useful against bigger, more athletic teams. He will also be valuable if Ethan Happ finds himself in foul trouble. Thomas would be much more effective at replacing Happ’s rebounding than either Van Vliet or Alex Illikainen.

Stat Prediction


10 minutes, 2.5 points, 3.2 rebounds, 40% FG, 30% 3, 50% FT



b.gif


Continue reading...
 
My biggest question is how much he worked over this past off-season to develop his shot? Did he do enough to earn time, or is he expecting to gain time just because of experience?

When I look past the fact he has the physical attributes to be an extremely valuable player, I see a guy whose work habits are going to either make him or break him. He needs to step up, and show he's part of the team, and willing to sacrifice his personal time to be better.

That said, I haven't heard one word about him being involved in off season workouts that are intended to improve himself. If he was doing something special, I believe we'd have heard about it.

I have a hunch Van Vliet is going to pass him on the depth chart, and we may see Charlie leaving the team, and heading elsewhere, to get playing time, and a possible NBA career. But, I don't see him getting that good, unless he pays the price through hard work.
 
I wish Charlie could/would red-shirt. Wish he'd have done it last year. Charlie was very young for his class. I believe he was only 17 when he enrolled. He could use some time to work on his game . . . he has the physical tools.

That said, I think we need a guy who can bang inside against some of the stronger teams. Van Vliet is not that guy. I see him more as someone who can get Vito Brown's minutes when Brown goes to the bench and to take Vito's spot as a starter full time next year. Thomas may well be the primary back-up for Happ, and with Happ's history of foul trouble those minutes might be important. Not sure Charlie will ever develop much of a shot. I'd be pretty happy if he'd just develop some strong post moves like Happ, another guy who doesn't have much of a shot but knows how to score.
 
Back
Top