Honest question...why does this guy not get any love for possibly playing at the next level? His basketball IQ seems pretty high. He's a decent defender and he seems to be pretty creative with the basketball. Just curious.
Because his game doesn't translate to the NBA. He'll probably get drafted by some team in the second round, but I don't see him lasting long. He could be a productive player in Europe though.
I like Howard, but I don't see him having much success in the NBA. Too small and won't have the strength to make up for the lack of size. His only positive skills will be fairly decent shooter and fairly smart.
I liked this article. http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?id=6266899 By Rick Reilly ESPN.com Butler is not to be trusted in this Final Four. It pretends to be a guppy but has a piranha's appetite. Underdog? Please. Butler is the favorite now, and a lot of us know it. Whatever you do, don't pet it. Its cover is blown after last year's Final Four. We all know how it works. Butler wants you to think it's something it's not. Take its heart, senior forward Matt Howard, who looks more like a geeky band-camp RA than a possible NBA first rounder. If Ichabod Crane played hoops, he'd look like this. He's 93 percent elbow and the rest Adam's apple. He's got so many juts, you could hang tinsel off him. He's the Academic All-American of the Year in Division I. He's so nerdy, you look at him and think, "What's the worst he's going to do to us? Reprogram our iPhones to Chinese?" Look at those socks. They lost their elastic years ago. And those sad shoes! If those shoes were your couch, it'd be in the alley now. "He has six pairs of brand-new shoes in his locker," teammate Shelvin Mack says. "But he won't wear them! He just keeps wearing those ratty old ones." And what's that on his head? Arugula? "That's just the hair I woke up with," he says, trying to run his fingers through it and getting stopped by grease. "Whatever it looks like in the morning, that's what I go with for the day." He gets it cut once a year, for free, by a teammate, whether it needs it or not. He rides a rusted-out bike to Butler's 6 a.m. practices, even in the dead of winter, even through ice storms, even though the handlebars suddenly bent under him the other day catapulting him onto the ice. "I fixed it," says Howard, who stands 6-foot-8 and 230, most of it bone. "Just poured some WD-40 in there and bent them back. It's a little risky to ride, I guess, but I can't see buying a new one." Kid, you'd never fit in the SEC. Not that it matters. Howard has more drive than some GM plants. He's driven Butler to back-to-back Final Fours, a feat never before accomplished by an Indiana school. Not Indiana. Not Purdue. Not Notre Dame. The Bulldogs wouldn't be anywhere near Houston without Howard. He's the designated floor diver, the insatiable rebounder, the guy who sets the kind of picks that would stop an Amtrak train. He once set a pick on Duke's Kyle Singler that sent Singler bouncing backward 180 degrees and onto his nose. When the Bulldogs needed a tip-in at the buzzer in their opening NCAA tournament game this year against Old Dominion, Howard gave it to them. When the Bulldogs needed one free throw to win their third-round game against No. 1 seed Pittsburgh, Howard gave it to them. When the Bulldogs needed a monster in the Sweet 16 against Wisconsin, Howard gave them 20 and 12. And when the Bulldogs needed somebody in the Elite 8 to launch himself headlong into a pile to tie up the ball and win the game against Florida, Howard and his boneyard body gave it to them. "Matt Howard will be an NBA player," says Butler's bespectacled coach, Brad Stevens. "His team would be winning wherever he went. That's who he is. He makes teams better. He's a winner. Whenever I have to answer questions about what's his real height, how long is he, [I just say], 'He wins. He just wins.'" Well, not always. Butler looked as confused as Howard's hair for a while this season. It lost three straight games in the anemic Horizon League. Houston looked farther than the moon then. The third loss was 62-60 to Youngstown State on Feb. 3. "That's why I'd say this trip [to another Final Four] just feels a little better than the last time," Howard says. "Because when you think about where we came from, how far down we were, standing in that Youngstown gym, man, I can't tell you how bad I felt." Howard is used to getting beat up. He's one of 10 kids of a Connersville, Ind., mail carrier. He's got four older brothers with the same kind of pickax elbows. He knows how it works: You bleed, you find a towel, you play some more. He rededicated himself and the Bulldogs got through it. Since those three losses, they've won 13 straight. Now they're 80 minutes from a national championship. Through it all, Howard kept on being what Mack calls "the weirdest person I've ever met in my entire life." "Like, remember that UConn-Syracuse game [in 2009] that went six overtimes?" teammate Ron Nored asks. "Well, after the third one, he texts me: 'Do you think Buffalo Wild Wings had anything to do with this?'" You ask Howard what's up and he'll say, "The ceiling." Tell him your name and he'll reverse the letters the rest of your life. Shelvin Mack is permanently Melvin Shack. Together, they'd like to go to Dan Siego someday. Perhaps they'll see girls wearing "skini mirts." Who cares? On the court, he gets it right. He's the thing you love most in a college basketball player -- a guy who just wants to win and doesn't care who gets the credit. A guy who hits class by day and glass by night. A scabbed-knee grinder who finishes every game with his tank on E. That's Hatt Moward in a shut nell.
If Ryan Bowen can make it the the league for a couple of years I think Matt would be jut fine cause he's not just a hustle guy like Bowen was but he has a offensive game to boot. If Chuck leaves for a bigger payday Howard could develop into a rebound hustle guy.But with Butler's sucess I don't see him being un drafted.
Ive watched Butler play quite a bit, and the way this guy plays will translate in the NBA. He just needs a role of some sort on the right team. The trick with making it in the NBA is carving out a niche for you as a player as something that coaches and GM's can rely on you to do consistently night after night. With a second round pick, I would definitely take him. At least you know what your getting from him. You are getting a 6'8" PF would will crash the glass, defend with tenacity, dive after loose balls, and most of all... not make mistakes. Not to mention he does actually have enough offensive skills to make open shots if left open.
Ryan Bowen averaged 14.4 pts and 8.7 rebounds a game as a senior. Chuck is not just a "rebound hustle guy" Matt Howard has a chance in the NBA, but he is really skinny for an NBA PF.
I like him as a college player but I don't see how he could be effective with meaningful minutes in the NBA. He would thrive in Europe though and that's the route I see him eventually taking.
Won't get drafted but Howard seems like a smart guy, he'll make it in life just not in NBA most likely.
Almost every team plays extremely physical basketball in Europe. So he would just be another player there because his physical play and defense would be typical in Europe. In the NBA he would be much more of a rarity because there just are not many physical players in the NBA. If Chuck Hayes can play in the NBA, then Howard certainly can. There are so few physical players in the NBA and so few players that play D in the NBA that it makes a guy like Howard a rare commodity in the NBA. But not for the European market.
You are expected to play that physical in Europe normally. The place where he would be needed is the NBA and not Europe. If anything he would have a hard time with the level of physicality that is allowed in a league like the Euroleague. It is extremely physical, the refs let you bang, and the players are much bigger and stronger than in the NCAA. He would be very undersized and trying to bang against bigger players that also bang and the refs just allow whatever to go. In the NBA he would be a Nocioni, Chuck Hayes type. So actually, he could be much more effective in the NBA. In the Euroleague, as soon as he started banging on guys he would just get it back more physical than anything he is used to. It's nothing at all like the NBA where the game is meticulously controlled by the refs. Howard's physical play and defense would be unusual for the NBA, but just normal basketball in Euroleague.