I know this was addressed at Buffnik but in my mind none of the players you mentioned were dogs, not even close. A player doesn't need to be an alpha to be a dog. Instead they need to be guys who never take a moment off, always fight, always hustle and always have the back of those on the team. XJ, Ski and King epitomize guys who take entire nights off or take long stretches off and don't put full effort in. They are quite literally the opposite of dogs and worse is that at least two of those guys were alpha's (Ski and XJ) and so they are even worse for the team because their style of play spreads like a cancer to the rest of the team. Worse for all three of the players mentioned, they had brief moments where they played with all out energy and enthusiasm and in those moments you see what could be...but never was or will be.
If you want to see two dogs play just look at Kennedy Leonard and Alexis Robinson (Since she is hurt you're not going to be able to see A.R. until next year now), watching them play, watching the passion, watching how they never have even a momentary lapse of effort is incredible and it is infectious as it has spread to other players on the team (even if those players don't have much talent). Much of this flows from Kennedy Leonard as that is just how she plays, but I think JR and her staff deserve a ton of credit as well, because they play and promote a style that is so aggressive that it helps bring out the dog mentality. Watching the CU women is kind of like watching UNLV back in the day or Paul Westheads Loyola teams...they just go, go, go, go, go, go...oh and they could care less if they end up landing on their arse or on their head, they just pop back up and go, go some more. It is intense and all sorts of fun to watch.
It is actually difficult for me to find comparable players or comparable effort from recent history on the CU men's team, though Roberson does come to mind and maybe I could pick out three or four games where the men played with that kind of passion within the last four years.
It's an open board, so glad to see your opinion.
We may just be playing a game of pontificating over semantics, but I sort of disagree on how to tie things together. My thoughts are sort of jumbled on the matter, but bored at work so let's try to write something in hopes of making some sense. To me, high energy is a trait that is not the same as competitiveness, which also isn't the same as doing what's best for the team, and also not the same as having your team's back. Yes, Roberson was a guy that had a blend of all those traits, and that made him great player, not his bball skill (specifically his offensive skill). Do you take though a team full of Robersons? Me - hell no, because you're not going to score. Of course, there are players that have offensive skill and grit (or "dog", being a "dude", "brick" piece to build on, etc), but those players are rare and highly sought. So what do you do - you try to find the best mix of players that fit what you want to accomplish, hoping you can coach their missing attributes, whether it be skill, energy, fundamentals, mental mistakes, etc. I completely get why you all (or at least you and Buffnik) think that Tad needs to recruit these type of kids more, and I agree, he needs a few of them. But I'd be willing to bet he has tried, and just missed. Of course, results matter, and I am ...not critical, but...at times underwhelmed with recruiting.
Fwiw - I think King, XJ, and Askia are all super competitive. I put it on the coaches to pull out the best energy they can out of their players. I love Tad, but this was not his best year coaching, and I bet he fully realizes that. It was a challenge though going into the year. Losing Scott was huge, but that's no excuse for poor perimeter defense. It'd be awesome to have a player that amps up practices, but apparently he didn't have that. So, it's on Coach Boyle to get that energy - extract it, demand it, somehow get it from your players. Knight intimidated it out of his players, Izzo lays a mindset for players to follow, K demands it or you don't play... ...whatever Tad tried, it just didn't work. Fortunately, college rosters turn over, so I'm looking forward to seeing how Tad coaches next year's team. I'm optimistic that they'll have better energy, and some of the "dog" you refer to will come out.
(agree on Kennedy - didn't watch a lot of the women's team, but what little I did...she stands out in terms of skill and energy)