UCLA Basketball: Looking at the Scholarship and Potential Depth Chart

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February 4, 2016; Los Angeles, CA, USA; UCLA Bruins guard Aaron Holiday (3) moves to the basket against Southern California Trojans guard Elijah Stewart (30) during the first half at Galen Center. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports
February 4, 2016; Los Angeles, CA, USA; UCLA Bruins guard Aaron Holiday (3) moves to the basket against Southern California Trojans guard Elijah Stewart (30) during the first half at Galen Center. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports /

Projecting the 2017 Depth Chart

Next season UCLA is going to have a ton of talent. Maybe then the Bruins can use my “platooning” idea. Either way, UCLA is going to be deep and have a lot of weapons at their disposal next season.

The only problem with that is deciding what players to play and when.

Keep in mind, this is a way-too-early projection, and once again does not take into consideration any one or two or three-and-dones, so bear with me. As fantastic as it would be to return every player, it will not happen. But if it did, next season’s depth chart could look a lot like this:

PG SG SF PF C

L. Ball

Holiday  Ali  Leaf  Welsh  Hands Li. Ball Goloman  Riley  Anigbogu  Olesinski  Okwarabizie Hill

Related Story: Steve Alford Talks to the Media, Previews Season

The hardest decision would have to be determining who runs the point. Ball and Hands could be the most skilled, so that could push the Bruin’s third PG Holiday over to the 2 spot, which is not bad because he is still a solid offensive threat and the best defender in the back court.

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LiAngelo is a good shooter, and should earn plenty of minutes as a backup shooting guard.

With the Bruins thin at small forward, that could prompt UCLA to use a 3-gaurd lineup, giving Ali the nod on the wing. Leaf and Welsh will keep their starting spots but will also have a lot of backup as the Bruins could be 3-deep at the two big spots.

Anigbogu could develop into the best defensive big man by next season, so he would have a lot of minutes off the bench. Riley and Hill have some developing to do, but for the most part, should be integral pieces to the game plan.

Goloman had a down season in 2015-16 due to an injury, so his time on the court will be heavily determined on how he develops in 2016-17. Pending their own development, Olesinski and Okwarabizie will see minimal backup minutes. That is a lot of talent.

Next: UCLA Basketball Has the Top Recruiting Class for 2017

Needless to say Bruin fans, the next few seasons of UCLA Basketball will be very exciting. Go Bruins!