brew - without realizing it, I think you may have answered your own question....
"I have to imagine Philly and Boston have pretty good S&C programs themselves."
Yes, they have great S&C programs. But PHILLY CUT HIM. They didn't think he was good enough or ready yet. No team drafted him despite his performance in the summer league, despite the many workouts because they didn't think he was good enough or ready yet.
Philly Cut him on Oct 24th. So on that day, his S&C ended. He then signed with Isreal at the end of October and headed over immediately. In talking to players that play over seas, S&C coaches are pretty much non-existent. He was there until mid December and then cut. So he comes back home, and was likely working out on his own unless his agent set him up with someone.
A month later he catches on with the Delaware 87ers. Now he is with their S&C coach for a month before he catches on with Boston.
Keep in mind that many S&C coaches do things very differently.
Philly S&C for one month.
Isreal with little to no S&C for 1 1/2 months.
Delaware S&C for one month
Now on to Boston.....
I think it is safe to say that one solid year of consistent S&C work with the same program, as well as training with the same coaches for a year would do any player a lot of good.
In the end he got a 10 day contract, so he 'wins', but it is a valid argument that another year would have been great for his development.
"When March Madness spills into April.... that's the gravy!" - Homer Simpson
Not strength necessarily, but overall body mass - the same problem that guys like Brandon Jennings have.
"When March Madness spills into April.... that's the gravy!" - Homer Simpson
The consistency may have helped, I guess I'm just not convinced staying would have been good for Blue.
The odds are he was always going to need time to catch on. Even an All-American season wouldn't have guaranteed he got drafted, ask Scottie Reynolds how that works out. Van had 3 full years with Todd. Another year wouldn't have hurt, but I'm not sure it would have helped much either. It's not like Van was going to be another Jae or DJO physically, and with his quickness being one of his best attributes, that type of strength program (despite the author's claim that he needs upper body strength) wasn't necessarily going to be in his best interest as a player.
Obviously Blue wasn't a perfect prospect or he'd have been drafted. But he succeeded where he needed to. He kept up his defense, improved his finishing at the rim, improved his jumper, and physically became a man. Being a year older may have hurt his chances. If this 10-day is his entire career, it'll be easy to criticize him. But if he can turn this into an actual career, it will be hard to say he made a mistake. Clearly it would be better for Marquette, Buzz, and us as fans to have him here this year, but that doesn't mean he made the wrong decision.