We'll be fine. You had to expect a hiccup when you lose the best player in the country and another guy with lottery talent. Everybody will be back next year, minus Kent, plus we're adding Henriquez, Judge, McGruder, Russell and Peterson. The future of KSU is bright!

Biggest plus
Uh.....He was our best player today
Really?
I think you might want to view his body of work again.
He's constantly turning the ball over. It's just not that he's a poor passer, but he's also got a knack of putting himself in bad positions with the ball. Our offense finds itself breaking down trying to bail him out because he's unable to get rid of the ball before the double team arrives, or worse, he's pinched himself against the baseline or sideline. Now I have to bag on Frank: his offense uses DK near the side key to distribute the ball, but teams slack off DK because he's not a consistant shooter from that spot and wait for the sloppy pass. At best, he should be used nearer the basket where his only choices are to turn and shoot or pass back outside to the guards.
On defense, I used to think that he was being unfairly singled out on fouls. But when you watch him, you see that he's sloppy with his body. He's either bringing his arms down when he's got the advantage or pushing his lower body into the opponent. His defense against the dribble penetrator is sloppy at best and often causes the other interior defenders to help. If you have lost your man, you still have responsibilties and DK seems to give up once beaten. He should be doing one of the following: get on the player that your help man was covering, get back on your man, or get in position for a rebound. In a zone, you are responsible for a section of the court. DK is usually responsible for the wing, but puts himself in bad position by cheating the paint when the ball is on the far wing.
Maybe the best and shortest way to say this is that he does not play under control, and with his athleticism, he needs to beat his opponent with his mind as much as his body. Jamslam is just as slow mentally, but has the ability to negate this liability with his physical skills. Plus, Jamar is a freshman, and could be using the reps this year to let the game slow down in his mind.