Andre Drummond does not have the same post game that Sullinger had as a freshman. He's 10 times the athlete that Sullinger is, but his offensive game is not as refined. When we need a basket this year, I'm pretty confident that Lamb will be option #1 and Oriakhi will be option #2.
Drummond will wow people with 3-4 highlight reel dunks or blocked shots per game. But if anyone is expecting him to be Kevin McHale in the low post, you're going to be disappointed.
I agree with you on the first part. Sullinger came into college with a highly advanced offensive game. OSU could throw the ball into him and against most teams he could find ways to score. Drummond has what I would call rough or raw skills. He's huge, extremely athletic and excellent coordination for a kid his size. He's one of those players you have to push beyond dunking range or he's going to kill you. Sullinger doesn't have that type of game.
I'm not sure what the lead post was driving at, but I don't think AD will have the same impact as Sullinger, nor will he need to. The team has plenty of weapons where AD simply needs to learn what are shots he can make and to take most of those shots, but also be aware of the situations when teammates have better shots or the clock is running down and he needs to take what he has. Easier said than done when the game at this new level for him is going to be so much faster. What looks like open space in HS is a trap in college. What looks like a lane to the basket is a charge waiting to happen. Boy am I happy they added that charging rule where you can't set up came in front of the basket. What was a foul looking to happen for big guys and slashers motoring to the hoop are now highlights for Sports Center.
Don't get me wrong. AD's impact will be big as long as he can stay out of foul trouble and on the floor. We need him to take away the middle on D, learn to handle the high and low screens (hedging), rebound on both ends, run the floor, convert close to the basket and set killer screens. Things like hitting the mid-range J and taking his man off the dribble are just gravy. He'll do much of this right out of the gate. He's learn to be solid in the rest by latter part of the BE season. He might just be a monster by tournament time. I think fans will be pleased by many of the things he will do but frustrated with his lack of consistency. That's what you usually see with talented big guys. He's not a project. Projects usually look bad to useless the first year or two, good maybe by the end of that 2nd year through the 3rd and then like "Wow! Where did that come from by the end of their 3rd to their 4th season, ala Hilton Armstrong, Hasheem Thabeet, etc. Drummond's contribution has the chance of being something similar to what Emeka gave us the first season, though he will probably be a better scorer by the end of the season than Emeka was his first year. It wasn't until his 3rd season when Emeka become proficient in the post.