I hear a lot about 6'8" kids that can shoot the 3 and play the 3. GARBAGE! The best 3's are smaller than that. Lot's of mid and high majors have very good centers that are about that size. If I'm recruiting a player that's 6'8" and has some weight for a mid major, I don't want someone that thinks he's a guard. We can get guards to play guard and shooters to shoot. We need big guys that can roam the paint.
I've seen lots of bigs that liked to play outside, and most of them are not of any benefit. I know I'm generalizing, but that was the way this thread started. And I'm not talking about the NBA or Duke, I'm an ISU fan and that's all I care about.
And? No one said anything about Gant or any kid of his skill set thinking he's a guard. No one said anything about him thinking he was a 3. Lots of mid and high majors have very good centers that are that size? Really? Lots of mid and high major have centers who weight 215 lbs? Don't confuse height with size. There is a difference.
Many, many college offenses play a no post Motion (capital M), a one post Motion, or a two post Motion where the posts are primarily screeners for perimeters. Even in that formation, there are plenty of opportunities for "bigs" to screen, step out, ball screen, step out, not to mention take second cuts back to the lane. The bottom line is, there is nothing wrong with "bigs" who can step out and play on the perimeter.
None of this deals with the types of systems that really aren't Motion, but certainly involve movement with purpose where bigs play away from the lane, away from the basket. ISU runs such an offense where their 5 man usually starts around FT line, and their 4 man often cuts through and slips down to the paint.
The ability to play on the perimeter doesn't make one a "guard". It doesn't even imply it. What is wrong with having a big who can post and take his man out on the floor? You act like that's a flaw.
If you're recruiting someone who is 6'8"...let's stop there. Here is the bottom line on this. It starts with at the D1 level, "You are who you can guard." It can often be that simple. You've seen lots of bigs that liked to play outside, and most of them are not of any benefit? Ever stop and think this is a HUGE reason why ISU offered Gant before the start of his sophomore season?
Imagine RJ Mahurin with 30 extra pounds. He's going to be a 6'8" kid who can do a lot of things. He played PG a good amount for his school team. He also played a lot inside. He also came off screens. As Mahurin starts to get the weight he needs to compete in the MVC, you're going to love him.
One day, Gant is going to get to 230-240 lbs. He'll be a kid of that size with the ability to play inside and out. What's garbage is pigeon holing kids with this kind of skill set because of some prohibiting way of thinking. Fortunately, his school coach has a system that allows him do a lot of things.
Meanwhile, don't twist the discussion into something it isn't. No one has suggested this kid thinks he's a guard or isn't willing to be a presence inside. You pulled that out of thin air.