Ian is right, watering will have far better result then any rolling. Take a four inch or six inch piece of pvc, put sand in it in layers and punch it and compact it, do that for twelve inches. Put a fine screen on the bottom and water it heavily and watch how much more it compacts with the water or a better word than compact would be SETTLE. You need to have water flowinng freely through your herringbone drains, when that happens continue to water some more, repeat this procedure the next day and maybe a third day. Following the seeding in two directions, Use the tires of the sand pro in a back and forth direction covering the entire suface with the knobs of the tires. This make a little indented three quater inch square. This brings the seed in contact with the soil and you should have a higher percentage of germination because of the micro enviroment it produces. It will also help the seed from moving in natural rains..up to a point. After four weeks, roll with what ever you can and that should be it for rolling, couple of good topdressing with the same sand the greens were built with during week four to eight and you will have the surface you seek. After the first year you will have a continous fight against compaction, why do anything in favor of that? I know that some will argue that rolling produces temporary compaction but...hard to convience me it has 0 effect in relation to any long term compaction. What were the perc rates on the native sand, labs like to have six to ten inches but if the native sand tested near four inches in an hour and budget was tight I would have stayed with the native sand and aerifed once or twice more per year unless your in an area with extremly high rates of annual rainfall. We have done this with at least three courses and in the last fifteen years and zero problems. I beleive I have read on this site where Tom D and crew has done the same. USGA greens are nice but there not for everybody, kind of like using baskets on your fairway mowers, yeah that would be great but its not practical for all clubs. There are lots of examples of great maintained year round greens with fine sand construction and also native soils greens, far from USGA specifications. I assume your planting bent because if your on bermuda... even less reason to use the perfect sand. Good luck!