I’m sure there are different descriptions depending on the coach, but here are my thoughts:
Traditional basically lineup:
1- PG or primary ball handler
2- SG or primary perimeter scorer/shooter, can handle the ball pretty well, but is focused on scoring more than distributing
3- SF tweener that is taller, plays on the perimeter, good defender, not always a great ball handler
4- PF bigger guy with some athleticism, but can play back to the basket
5 - C bigger body guy who grabs rebounds and makes post moves, plays good defense
Since the three point line and more skilled big men have been incorporated in the game, two true posts (PF and C) are not that common anymore at least in college. Mid-majors especially don’t usually land skilled big men or they take a while to develop. So most good mid-majors beat teams with three point shooting, ball handling, and quickness. Kind of like how Loyola took out an Illini team with a great traditional college big man in Cockburn.
Most mid-majors it seems to go for something like this:
1 and 2 spots still the same.
3 - third taller guard who can handle it some and shoot, good defender would still be nice.
4 - basically the equivalent of the old small forward. Maybe can shoot outside a little, but quicker and can rebound and slash or play in the post a little. Ala Elijah Child or Mal or Theron Wilson or Taylor Brown.
5 - if you can get a center great, but for mid-majors this ends up being more of an old school PF. Darius Hannah doesn’t shoot like some want a four man to do in today’s game, but his body type and quickness would be an example. POB would be the closest to a true center I can remember at Bradley in a while. Meta would fit the traditional body type of this spot. Rienk and Thomas seem like more new school big men that can step out and shoot a 3 too, further blurring the traditional positions.
Since most mid-majors and most teams in general start 3 guards (occasionally four on really small teams) and they’re so important to
mid-major success, ideal roster construction to me has 7 guards, 6 forwards with hopefully one or two guys capable of playing a big bodied center role in an ideal world depending on matchups. That’s why I haven’t been a huge fan of our roster construction where we waste spots on a lot of 4/5 position guys who don’t play instead of grabbing more perimeter guys.
Some guys are “combo” guards like Hickman where they are shooting guards that can play point, but it’s not their main spot or they’re not usually the main point guard. They are usually not super small either for defensive purposes (Hickman was 6-3). Anyone can technically play any spot, but it’s not ideal. Deen would be too short to defend most 2s effectively as an example.
This is how I see them (this is all fluid and in the eyes of the beholder):
Deen - 1
Johnson - 1
Dillon - 2
Burch - 2 (could be a combo guard)
Zek - 3, 2, he does play the 1 but I didn’t think he was great at it in the past.
Davis - 3, I think he could be a stretch 4 in smaller lineups but he’s not used that way
Hannah - 4/5
Atlason - 4 (Brian used him as a 3 and 5 at times, I don’t think he should in either case)
Thomas - 5/4
Linke - 5
Meta - 5
Biliew - 5 (not skilled enough to be a 4)
van der Knaap - not sure seems like a 4 maybe a 3
Hardtke - I guess a 2? He was a walk-on so not a guy that’s typically thought of as skilled enough for any D1 position. He doesn’t handle the ball in meaningful minutes and he’s not big enough nor athletic enough to be a 3.