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A first look at the 2018-19 Flashes: Very young, very different, very Starkey

The biggest thing we know about next year’s women’s basketball team is it will be very different from this year’s.

Three starters are gone, including Jordan Korinek, the Flashes’ leading scorer and one of the top players in Kent State history. So is McKenna Stephens, who started with Korinek at forward for most of the last three years,

Six freshmen are incoming, in what looks like the best recruiting class in school history.

It will be the first true Todd Starkey team. The coach inherited a complete roster his first season and won a MAC East championship with it. Every starter in the 2017-18 season was a Danny O’Banion recruit; none of the five freshmen Starkey’s staff brought in averaged more than 10 minutes a game.

That sure won’t be true next year.

I’m guessing three freshmen will start.

So the question of the next season is simple: Can Kent State win with freshmen, even very good freshmen?

First, let’s talk about the key players returning. They’re a solid base but can’t carry the team by themselves. Key people are:

Two other key returnees:

Of the five freshmen who finished the season (one left after the end of the semester), point guard Erin Thames played the most minutes — 9.7 a game. But two of the incoming freshmen play the point, including the player of the year in Massachusetts. So Thames will have lots of competition for playing time. I still think the best of the class is Monique Smith, a 5-11 forward-guard from San Diego who averaged a double-double her last three years in high school.

As for the incoming freshmen:

The Flashes added two players in the April signing period — 6-2 post player Ijah Fletcher from Hicksville High School on Long Island and junior college transfer Jessee Wallis, a 5-10 guard from Walters State Community College, a perennial junior college power in Tennessee. Fletcher averaged about 21 points a game her senior year; Wallis was a 1,000-point scorer in high school. It’s very difficult to evaluate April signees; the best players usually commit before their senior years. I’ll have more on Fletcher and Wallis when I round up the senior-year performances of the recruiting class.

So here’s the roster. I’d think someone will be transferring out because I count 16 scholarship players, and the team can have 15 scholarships. I haven’t heard anything official; the new roster is posted at the start of summer, when the freshmen arrive.

POST: 6-4 senior Merissa Barber-Smith;  6-3 sophomore Amanda Sape, who scored one point as a freshman; 6-2 freshman Lindsey Thall; 6-2 freshman Ijah Fletcher.

GUARD-FORWARD: 6-1 senior Tyra James, 6-foot junior Ali Poole, 5-11 sophomore Monique Smith, 5-11 freshman Annie Pavlansky, 5-10 freshman Hannah Young, 5-10 junior Jessee Wallis. (I’ll explain the “guard-forward” in a minute.)

SHOOTING GUARD: 5-9 senior Alexa Golden, 5-7 junior Megan Carter, 5-10 sophomore Kasey Toles, 5-11 sophomore walk-on Margaux Eibel.

POINT GUARD: 5-6 sophomore Erin Thames, 5-3 freshman Asiah Dingle, 5-foot freshman Mariah Modkins.

By class, it’s:

So what kind of team will next year’s Flashes be (besides very young)?

Without Korinek, it certainly will look very different on the court. She averaged 20 points a game; Kent’s offense went through her. There’s nobody remotely like that on next year’s roster. Even Thall is a very different kind of player.

That’s why I emphasized “guard-forward,” which may be more than the traditional wing. All of the players I listed have some size and most played some post in high school (though it’s a lot easier to be a 5-10 forward in high school than college). All have solid rebounding statistics at some point in their career.

I can see the team playing, at least some of the time, what coaches call a “four-out” — a post and four players on the perimeter. Ohio has played that kind of offense successfully for several seasons.

The team has a lot more outside shooters; it — I hope — is likely to move out of last in the MAC in three-point shooting.

I think the team will have considerably more speed and quicker hands on defense.

I’m sure Starkey and his staff have been retooling his offense and defense to reflect the new personnel.

A contender? Unlikely. A .500 team? Maybe. Better than this year’s 13-19 record. Maybe. With so much new, it’s impossible to guess.

The team is probably at least a year away. But Starkey is so high on the freshmen (as are their high school coaches) that I’m looking forward to seeing what will happen next November.

 

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