The Perry PG experiment should be over.
Bench McNair (and give him the 10ish minutes per game he was always supposed to get) and the primary lineup is Ames, Perry, Cam, AK and DNG. Play more tempo/push the ball and take our lumps with Ames (can we really turn the ball over that much more) and get some cheap points. If we must have two bigs, play DNG in tandem with Colbert primarily with McNair truly functioning as a way to give the other two rest on the bench.
Lots of teams trotting out 3-4 guard lineups these days and it's not like McNair is a force in the rebounding/defense department, so I question how much we'll lose if his minutes are cut by 10-15 per game. With that lineup we can also more easily switch on defense.
Bonus - Ames either develops or doesn't and we have better insight as to what to do when Castillo arrives on campus next year.
I don't disagree that we should move some folks around, just to see what happens if nothing else. However, I think our current line up would be better if we just actually played the 5-wide we set up in all the time. Actually move the ball.
KU is almost always excellent for 2 reasons:
1. They get cream crop kids
2. They move the rough ridin' ball at lightspeed around the arc. We pass once, kid looks around, maybe dribbles or fakes once or twice, then they pass to a kid that is just standing in place and not moving toward the ball or basket, and we wonder why we never get open looks or good drives. KU swings the ball several passes fast as eff and the D has no hope of adjusting in time for complete coverage. We dribble around for 15 seconds before we do anything nearly every trip down. Tang isn't stupid. He is obviously doing so intentionally and that pretty much has to be to waste time within each game since he knows our ability to score is going to be far less than almost all of our opponents.
Maybe this is our adjustment. Maybe this is the best plan. If that is the case, pretty much every practice should be a hard session of defensive drills and how to stop creating turnovers.