To be clear, Doryan is not a top 100 recruit. He is somewhere in the 150 range. He and Sutton are also both not physically developed. The difference is that Sutton is not a low post player and has some ball handling skills that would work well as a four in our offense. So, I can see Sutton being in the rotation a lot more than Doryan, who is going to have to adjust to the physicality of ACC basketball. In others words, I think people are overstating how much playing time Doryan is going to get.
I won't argue with any of that.
As for Sutton, I am admittedly heavily biased in my favoring players with high game IQ and court awareness. Those are the guys who make the players around them better, are less susceptible to defensive breakdowns and facilitate good team offense. Maybe my take on his tape is wrong, but I think he may play right away, skinny though he may be.
As for Onwuchekwa, if he is a legit 6'10" and 235lbs then he would fill a need based on size alone. So, I suspect he gets a chance to play. Whether he is ready or not is another matter.
The central off-season debate is crystalizing: What is the greater need: having a 4 that can hit the three and maintain spacing or a post defender with adequate size to defend the rim?
The concern with Ndongo at the five is that he is smallish for a 5. We were not a good defensive team last year (Gt was ranked #265 out of 353 teams last year in defensive efficiency). Not all of that is on post defense but we were not good.
The concern with Ndongo at the 4 is that his failure to hit outside shots will allow defenses to sag and inhibit offensive efficiency. Is it really true that he can't shoot?
Personally, I look at Ndongo as Chris Bosh-lite. He is Bosh-ish. Bosh-y. The way I look at it, if you can't make that work at the 4, then you are not trying hard enough. But if no one else can competently play the 5 this year, then the debate is moot once again.