Good points. Watson performed and is a great contributor but he doesn't have a huge offensive arsenal at this point. I'm more than happy to defer to the decisions of the guy on the national coach of the year short list.
I think it's really this simple. If he puts in a ton of work in the offseason and develops offensive skills, he'll play a ton and probably start. If he doesn't develop his offensive skills significantly he won't start and his minutes may not even be that great.
I think he's going to make a big jump and be good next year, and maybe great. He's got great physical tools and plays his ass off.
Once you get well into the season with lots of games, I think by far the best metric is adjusted team efficiencies. I hate Torvik's individual player metrics because they are completely overweighted to an individual "possession" being determined by that player generating a stat. That does a terrible job telling what really matters, which is how well the team plays when you are on the court. Instead it dramatically over-inflates the shoot it only if you are wide open kind of guys and dramatically penalizes the guys that are asked to run the offense and create at higher volumes.
But there are two major important things that the data shows:
https://evanmiya.com/?player_ratings
1. Not too surprising to most, but of the 9 guys that get significant minutes, there's a significant dropoff in the teams adjusted offensive efficiency with Watson on the floor vs. the other 8. Now, I think last night was not a fluke and a lot more of a coming out party for Watson, and if he can stay aggressive cutting and being willing to take some shots, he's going to boost that drastically.
2. More surprising at face value is the team's adjusted defense also dips vs. the others aside from Pavs.
I think Watson IS a great defender, both in transition and in the half-court. But I think it's pretty much entirely a function of #1. If the offense is significantly worse, that means more missed shots and turnovers, which gives the opponent an opportunity to score in transition. And it is WAY easier to score on ISU when they can't get their half-court D set up. Missed shots and turnovers are how that can happen.
So I think with even a minor boost in offensive production, it's going to have a big impact on both ends of the court. And to be fair to Watson, it's super hard to play limited minutes and produce. That's a great credit to him that he has always remained ready to produce in a really tough role.
But let's be clear. TJ knows exactly what the hell he's doing.