They also have 9 guys in a regular rotation averaging 10min/g. Only two of those guys hasn't played in every single game, with one of them being the last one on the bench that plays often. Ohio, by comparison, has just four players who have played in every game.
It appears that this has become your go to line. If you look at the stats yes, only four guys have played every game. But, three guys have missed but one and two guys but two. Not quite as dire as you make it out to be. At the end of the day, whoever is on the floor still needs to close out, block out, and make crisp passes.
Maybe it has. But I'm pretty sure if you look at most teams, their core group hasn't missed more than 3-5 games combined.
For example, the two other teams I follow are my Dad's Alma Mater, UC, and my sister's UD. UC has lost two games in total to their core group of ten guys who play 10min/g or more. That guy is their PG, Cane Broom. It was VERY noticeable last night when they scraped by Temple he wasn't playing.
Dayton has a nine man rotation of guys playing 10min/g or more. They've lost 5 games to a banged up Xerius Williams, and two to Trey Landers, both major minutes players in their top 7 guys. So a total of 7 games, plus a couple games when each guy barely played when they were injured during the game.
By comparison, Ohio has had Laster miss 1, Dartis miss 1, plus both missed most of the game they got hurt in. Butler missed one with illness. Carter has missed 10, plus most of one of the three games he was able to play in. BVP, who I would have assumed would have been in the regular rotation hasn't played one minute - 13 games. Gareri, who would seem likely to play more than 10min/g, has missed 12 games out of 13. And lastly, Kevin Mickle has missed two games, and essentially a third when he left early vs Indiana State.
Tally all that up, and you have 40 full games missed by Ohio's core group of 10 players, plus three games almost completely missed. 40-43 games as compared to 2 to 7ish games. Tally that up in game minutes played, and consider that.
So yeah, maybe it's become my go to line, but it also is factual reality.