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Having opened his senior season against four opponents
lacking in size, it's no surprise 6-foot-11 center Greg Stiemsma has gotten off
to a strong start this season for the undefeated Badgers.
"Greg feels this is his time," head coach Bo Ryan said
during his press conference Monday. "He doesn't have to have 30 minutes on the
court, but knows that he has to feel that he is a better player this year and
has learned some things."
Though Stiemsma has started every game for Wisconsin this
season, he's only averaging 16.8 minutes per game. Still, the big man has been
able to put up consistent numbers, providing 5.3 rebounds and 4.5 points per
game. His presence in the paint has also been a contributing factor for the
Badgers’ stingy defense thus far; he leads the team in blocks with nine, five
of which came against Colorado in the decisive game of the America's Youth
Classic.
Perhaps the most noticeable improvement for Stiemsma this
season, though, is the lack of fouls. A year after averaging nearly two fouls
per game (in only 10 minutes of action) the senior has picked up just three
fouls in the team's first four games.
"It's his last year, so you don't want to go out there, and
reach, and grab, and bump and get overly physical … and get on the bench too
many times," Ryan said. "It might happen. Hopefully if it does, it's only a
game or two. But he does have presence in the middle."
That doesn't mean there isn't room for improvement, especially
as the Big Ten season creeps into view.
"That one stretch Saturday (when Stiemsma blocked several
consecutive shots), that's pretty good, but I know those guys aren't as big as
a lot of the guys you're going to face now coming up in the scheduling," Ryan
said. "That's a great start for him, his timing on the blocks is pretty good,
but he still knows that he's got to stop the ball without leaving his feet at
times."
Redshirting not
the right course of action for Jarmusz
After not playing in either of the Badgers’ first two
regular season games, Tim Jarmusz looked as if he'd be redshirted this season.
But the freshman guard entered late in Saturday night’s game against Florida
A&M, thereby forgoing the option to sit out the season without losing eligibility.
"He's just a competitor," Ryan said of Jarmusz. "He's a
player that wants to do as much as he can and try to get minutes. I don't know
why he would want to do anything else, because that's the reason we brought him
into the program, because of the things we feel he's going to be able to do."
Though Michael Flowers, Jason Bohannon, Trevon Hughes and
Joe Krabbenhoft each occupy spots ahead of Jarmusz on the guard depth chart,
Ryan is confident getting Jarmusz into action this season is the right
decision, regardless of how much time he sees.
"No matter what you do, you just make it work," Ryan said. "I
don't think there's a magic number of minutes that you have to play in order to
make it a worthwhile competition here."
No changes
looming for starting lineup
The starting five of Stiemsma, Brian Butch, Marcus Landry,
Krabbenhoft and Hughes has led the Badgers to a 4-0 start this season, and Ryan
has no plans of making changes any time soon.
"I don't fool around a lot with lineups because I don't
worry about them," Ryan said. "I don't obsess about them. I don't try to play
games with them. That's never been the way I've had to motivate players because
I think there's better methods."
Absent from the list of starters is Flowers. Though Flowers
started every game last season, he has been coming off of the bench this year.
Even with the change, he has responded well, averaging 7.3 points per game
while logging more minutes than Stiemsma and Butch. Bohannon too will continue
to come off the bench despite his 7.5 points per game start to this season.
"I think if you have rapport with your players and an
understanding, and you're doing the things that you hopefully should be doing,
then you don't have to play with the lineup as far as starters," Ryan said.