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Trey Pettigrew commits

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Nevada transfer Trey Pettigrew commits to BU
 

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Here was the info we had posted about Trey Pettigrew from 3/27/23-

New portal name- Trey Pettigrew- 6'3" combo guard originally from Chicago Kenwood Academy in the class of 2022. Bradley showed some interest in him out of high school, but he eventually committed to Nevada. In his freshman season at Nevada (2022-23), he played in 27 of their 33 games, averaging 11 minutes per game, 3.2 ppg, 1.4 rpg, and 9-35 from three on the season. His playing time dropped off late in the season, and now he has entered the transfer portal.
Bio- https://nevadawolfpack.com/sports/me...pettigrew/8477
Stats- https://www.espn.com/mens-college-ba...trey-pettigrew
 
I thought Pettigrrew was a pg initially too but he's always been mentioned as a combo guard, even coming out of high school. I think he will be similar to Sean East style-wise and that adding an established pg through the portal or as a grad transfer would be a smart thing to do. I expect big things from Pettigrew before he's done at Bradley.
 
I’ve been trying to find more to read on what to expect from Pettigrew and this article from a Nevada site seems interesting:

https://nevadasportsnet.com/news/re...ettigrew-shows-flashes-in-lone-year-at-nevada

I assume our plan is to have him as starting point, but this article mentions his skills at point and his defense are projects, which obviously sub par defense won’t fly with Brian. His numbers (in very limited minutes) seemed to have very low steals and assists (even for his minute level), and his three percentage was low.

So anyone have a better idea what to expect? What is his game like, is he more of a driver and that’s it? I know he was a highly touted prospect last year, and he was behind good players ar Nevada. I’m hoping he shoots betters than those limited numbers show. I’m hoping his point play, assists, and steals are projected to develop quicker than this article seems to indicate. Do we expect him to be our starting point next year?

Anybody can play defense. It is played with your head, feet and effort. I don't believe the BU staff would have gone after him if they didn't think he could coached to play defense.
 
Anybody can play defense. It is played with your head, feet and effort. I don't believe the BU staff would have gone after him if they didn't think he could coached to play defense.

We’ve had plenty of guys Brian signed come in and not play a ton the first year or two because their defense wasn’t up to par. Zek was one of those. I’m sure they think he can do it, but will it be instant or is it a project as the article mentioned? I didn’t watch him play, but four steals in 306 minutes isn’t very much. That’s on top of 9 assists in the same time which makes his per 40 stats 0.5 steals and 1.2 assists. I’m not making any conclusions based on this, but I’m curious what everyone else sees/projects that I don’t know about here other than he was projected to have talent out of high school. Also I’m curious what position he will play if his PG skills are raw and how well he is projected to shoot from three. The only things I know at this point are his stats and that Nevada article talking about his game as skilled but raw still. So I could be missing a lot of info here no doubt.

I disagree with the sentiment anyone can play defense as well. I believe there is a lot of skill to it beyond just effort. Having quick hands, discipline, focus, quick feet, smart decision making, the ability to understand and make quick adjustments, digest game plans in detail for different situations and players, communication with teammates are all skills a lot of players don’t have. The basketball intelligence and being quick mentally alone are skills in my opinion. We’ve seen plenty of great athletes be poor defenders. And it’s not always all effort, in my opinion, that holds them back. But some guys just don’t have the desire to play defense either, that is true.
 
I agree that good defense is pure " want to commitment by the player"....some players just don't possess the desire to do it.
Also question Trey as a PG and see Burch as more of a PG....but I'm just basically going of the limited video watched on both player's....:-o:?:?:?
 
I'm glad we're getting kids from Chicagoland again!

prob nobody cares (I do), but Loyola has contacted and offered 60 to 70 different kids in the portal
and yet, and they did land one from Davidson who averages 9ppg, shooting 27% from the arc.
Meanwhile, Bradley's only offered two kids from the portal -
both top talent kids from Chicago - and landed both of them.
 
We’ve had plenty of guys Brian signed come in and not play a ton the first year or two because their defense wasn’t up to par. Zek was one of those. I’m sure they think he can do it, but will it be instant or is it a project as the article mentioned? I didn’t watch him play, but four steals in 306 minutes isn’t very much. That’s on top of 9 assists in the same time which makes his per 40 stats 0.5 steals and 1.2 assists. I’m not making any conclusions based on this, but I’m curious what everyone else sees/projects that I don’t know about here other than he was projected to have talent out of high school. Also I’m curious what position he will play if his PG skills are raw and how well he is projected to shoot from three. The only things I know at this point are his stats and that Nevada article talking about his game as skilled but raw still. So I could be missing a lot of info here no doubt.

I disagree with the sentiment anyone can play defense as well. I believe there is a lot of skill to it beyond just effort. Having quick hands, discipline, focus, quick feet, smart decision making, the ability to understand and make quick adjustments, digest game plans in detail for different situations and players, communication with teammates are all skills a lot of players don’t have. The basketball intelligence and being quick mentally alone are skills in my opinion. We’ve seen plenty of great athletes be poor defenders. And it’s not always all effort, in my opinion, that holds them back. But some guys just don’t have the desire to play defense either, that is true.

I watched the videos of him playing and found the reason why his assists were low. He doesn't pass the ball. Very athletic but if he is going to play for Wardle he will need to learn to play team ball not me ball
 
I watched the videos of him playing and found the reason why his assists were low. He doesn't pass the ball. Very athletic but if he is going to play for Wardle he will need to learn to play team ball not me ball

Let me add a comment about Trey. He may have played the way he did because of the coaching style. Wardle uses alot of movement in his offense. Move to get somebody open then when you get open take advantage of it. That may work better for Trey with his athleticism
 
What do you know about Pettigrew? Just curious. I jad never heard of him before.

https://nevadasportsnet.com/news/re...ettigrew-shows-flashes-in-lone-year-at-nevada

Pettigrew came to Nevada a much ballyhooed recruit after ranking No. 149 in the nation in the 2022 class. He was rated higher than fellow true freshman Darrion Williams, who had a breakout rookie season en route to Mountain West freshman of the year honors. Pettigrew, however, didn't get nearly as much playing time despite his recruiting accolades as Nevada had one of the best backcourts in the MW with all-league honorees Jarod Lucas and Kenan Blackshear. In his brief flashes of play, Pettigrew showed the speed and quick-twitch athleticism that made him such a highly rated recruit. He was able to get to the basket with a quick first step and made 15-of-29 closes twos (51.7 percent). But he never got a lot of minutes as his defense and ability to run the team as a point guard was forecasted as a multiple-year project.
 
I think Pettigrew was a good pickup.

He might have not had a stellar season at Nevada but he was behind two very good guards so his minutes were limited.

I think he has a lot of potential here and will be a major player next season.
 
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