WHAT?!?!?!?!? @kyk1827
Just looked and Ron is 1 for 14 from deep since the Iowa game. Wow. Slump city. Let's hope he breaks out of it tomorrow night.Harper is a 28% 3 point shooter.
25% in conference play this year.
you havent responded to my math....2 for 0 is better than 2 for 1I already have all up and down this thread. The math says 2 for 1 every time. Every time. You saying that it doesn’t matter that Pike fbs the clock down to avoid a 2 for 1 because “we don’t know what could’ve happened” is outrageous. What we know did happen is he took expected points added off the board.
What I’ve said about Geo: he is a pull up shooter and off ball defender. That’s it. Most of the time he’s not that good especially against teams with a pulse. He can’t get to the rim consistently and can’t guard any decent guard in the league man to man on the ball. He is severely impacted by Pikiells rotations flaws, which isn’t his fault.
With 1:15 left why didn't Collins go 3 for 2? Buie took a shot with 53 seconds.
I realize not the strongest of arguments![]()
bac come on man. LOL. Even if you get an extra .01 points by getting the 2 for 1, it makes sense. We average .98 points per possession.this isnt the NBA....sport
Eventually we will get to the point where every shot needs to be taken in 8 seconds to make sure you get more shots in a game....it's Math.
so again, I'll ask the same question that not one single person has responded to after asking it about 10 times.
- Geo got the ball in bounded at 48 seconds and dribbled in place at half court until 34 seconds before moving when Ron and Myles came up to set double screens. Geo then kicked it to Ron for a shot with 28 seconds left. In other words, this "play" took 6 seconds. Why couldn't we inbound at 48 seconds and do that right away in lets say 8 seconds vs the 6 second that it actually took? In that scenario we get the shot off with 40 seconds left and quite literally run the exact same play we ran but now get a 2 for 1. Why couldn't we do that? Here are the questions I want answered by those who think what we did was smart.
1) the bolded above
2) What was the thought process and advantage to having Geo dribble in place for 14 seconds as the clock ticked down from 48 seconds to 34 seconds?
If you can provide me with ANY rationale for this I'll accept it.
you havent responded to my math....2 for 0 is better than 2 for 1
Rutgers misses the shot and gets the offensive rebound and then gets the last shot. We rebounded 50% of our own misses...Over 50% if you removed missed FTs2 for 0?
We were 50/50 on rebounds from our offensive glass. If we rebounded the Harper miss, we would get the last shot, making it 2 RU shots for 0 NW shots.2 for 0?
So before I address the bolded, Pikiell obviously believes that lets take whatever time is needed to get the look we want then I trust my guys to defend. You would choose to go two for one and try to get a shot up in 8-10 seconds. It doesn't make either of you wrong. You have different philosophies.
I'd agree with him and I'd point back to the Nebraska game because it is eerily similar. Tie game and we have the ball with ~45 seconds. Geo takes a shot with ~15 seconds left, Yeboah gets the huge offensive rebound, and you know the rest.
To your bolded point, once you make the decision the use your full possession, why would you rush? Also, context matters. Geo is unconscious at this point. Sometimes it isn't complicated...put the ball in that kids hand and let him make the decision. He found one of our best shooters for an open look that rimmed out.
I think the biggest problem is why are we picking apart wins in the midst of a historic run? This is why we can’t have nice things!
Wrong, it’s 2020 shot clock only resets to 20.Rutgers misses the shot and gets the offensive rebound and then gets the last shot. We rebounded 50% of our own misses...Over 50% if you removed missed FTs
2 bad shots statistically is better than > one good shot which you guys are defining as a 25% shot. Not opinion just math. What we generated was 1 25% shot that we could get at any time. Horrific.It goes without saying that we are having a great year by Rutgers standards. And hopefully better is to come but you never know.
I see why people are talking about “two different philosophies” and I see why people are defining it as such. BUT, one Philosophy (in the NBA) has proven to add more expected points over an opponent, 2 for 1, then the other philosophy. When considering that it seems to me one philosophy should be adopted over the other.
I will indulge the “rushed shot argument” even though it is a fallacy that shots taken in a 2 for 1 must be rushed. What I will say to that is even a rushed layup attempt is a higher percentage shot than a Ron Harper Jr. 3-pt attempt. So not only did we potentially trade two possessions for one, we did so for one shot that’s a lower percentage one that a rushed layup that people are arguing against.
I’ll leave it at that.
Rutgers misses the shot and gets the offensive rebound and then gets the last shot. We rebounded 50% of our own misses...Over 50% if you removed missed FTs
We were 50/50 on rebounds from our offensive glass. If we rebounded the Harper miss, we would get the last shot, making it 2 RU shots for 0 NW shots.
So you’d rather have only one chance at an offensive rebound rather than two? Lol
It was a dumb move by pike, we won so people think it doesn't matter but it does. You can't do **** like that
Pikiell's record, 17 and 7, 8 and 5, are indications that for every "dumb move" he must be making some "smart moves." To cherry pick and call certain plays "dumb" based on hindsight makes no sense to me. Was he dumb for taking Peter Kiss, or was it a decision which didn't work out? In this instance is his decision dumb for not going 2 for 1 or is it a decision that didn't work out? Take his whole body of work and we all know that his good decisions far outweigh his bad ones.
Pikiell's record, 17 and 7, 8 and 5, are indications that for every "dumb move" he must be making some "smart moves." To cherry pick and call certain plays "dumb" based on hindsight makes no sense to me. Was he dumb for taking Peter Kiss, or was it a decision which didn't work out? In this instance is his decision dumb for not going 2 for 1 or is it a decision that didn't work out? Take his whole body of work and we all know that his good decisions far outweigh his bad ones.
I wasn't advocating one way or the other here, just explaining what he meant.So you’d rather have only one chance at an offensive rebound rather than two? Lol
I might as well make this my signature on this message board, I swear: Pikiell is a doing a good job overall but even good coaches have weaknesses and one of Pikiell's is that he doesn't integrate modern basketball theory (the stuff backed up by oodles and oodles of research) as much as he should.
It was a dumb move by pike, we won so people think it doesn't matter but it does. You can't do **** like that.
I’ll take Pikes assessment of personnel, both physical and mental over the math of analytics every time.2 bad shots statistically is better than > one good shot which you guys are defining as a 25% shot. Not opinion just math. What we generated was 1 25% shot that we could get at any time. Horrific.
2 is greater than 1, simple
if that's his thought then he's just dumb and doesn't get math. We quite literally have people in this thread arguing that 1+0=1 is better than 1+1=2. We are arguing math. Math that a 1st grader comprehends.Pike runs practices and knows the mind-set of his players...he didn't think a 2 for 1 was giving his team the best chance to succeed and make a stop
The "but we won" argument is so, so, SO bad. If Buie pulls a Wieskamp and his ridiculous running hook at the buzzer goes in, does that change whether or not passing up the 2-for-1 was a bad decision? Of course not!
Of course not.Yeah of course. But you’re not able to render a study meaningless with an argument like grass isn’t green because you saw it burnt beige before.
Old school coaches, as usual, are behind when it comes to change. You see it in every sport. Cosches can be notoriously stubborn. Everyone will be doing 2 for 1 eventually. It is just a matter of how fast people adapt.I think the whole point is that it should be a "math" thing. Pikiell is not out of the mainstream for college coaches on this issue, so that isn't / should not be the criticism of him, but there seems to be an inefficiency there. It is the same thing that existed for years (and still does, but to a lesser extent) with going for it on 4th downs in football -- the stats always said teams should go for it much more often than they did.
Pikiell did the same thing in the Nebraska game, and I raised the issue then.
Another issue is why let NW get the last shot of the game? If you can foul a NW shooter who is under 70% and they only get a 1 and 1, math says they should be fouled. I don't know the NW FT percentages well enough to know if that was even possible on Sunday, but it is another thing that is rarely done in bball even though the math seems to dictate otherwise.
People keep using the same argument over and over and over that does not apply here its wild. You cant use the argument that you need the full shot clock to get a good play and a 2 for 1 is rushing and then say we should stand are half court and dribble out the clock and start the offense with little time left on the shot clock. They are mutually exclusiveSo your excuse is you need to dribble in place for 14 seconds while staring at the clock to get rhythm sense and flow? Again, we didn't even have to practice a 2 for 1 here LOL all we had to do was run the same exact play just start 14 seconds sooner rather than dribbling in place for 14 seconds. I'm in the twilight zone, it's official.
It. Is. The. Same. Exact. Concept.this isnt the NBA....sport
Lol, yea Geo lulled them to sleep. Those dribbles were essentialGeo getting the ball at halfcourt and immediately going into a 8 second play does not get the same shot for Harper.
99% of the people watching, including the NWU defense have seen it before. Geo dribbling at halfcourt, slowly moving forward with the crossover to take a shot. So Yes, the halfcourt dribbling was the plan and that's why Harper was open.
In this situation its irrelevant obviously since so much time was left. In another situation, sure, that difference might make you not pursue a 2 for 1. This situation, this game? zero factorYou are being your usual anti-Pikiell self. Using the NBA as a guide. They advance the ball to halfcourt on a timeout. That means 2-1 makes more sense.
Co-signed.I might as well make this my signature on this message board, I swear: Pikiell is a doing a good job overall but even good coaches have weaknesses and one of Pikiell's is that he doesn't integrate modern basketball theory (the stuff backed up by oodles and oodles of research) as much as he should.
Loyola Marymount used to play that way.Eventually we will get to the point where every shot needs to be taken in 8 seconds to make sure you get more shots in a game....it's Math.
In the end, this is the best answer.The coach who has been on the sidelines for 25+ years explained it based on his first hand experience of seeing how it actually plays out in games. He said he has seen two rushed shots in this situation.
It's not math....it's what his eyes have seen in real games over 25 years.