I hope so too. He can't make the final four.UL fans are hoping he replaces RP
Reminds me of Tubby ball... But the guy has been more than impressive winning college basketball's toughest conference regular season championship two out of the last three years. He's also a class act. Don't want that style for us, but you can't take anything away from him.
No, the game is just fine the way it is. The last thing we need is the NCAA screwing more things up. Some coaches play fast, others play slow. Good teams can adapt to eitherAbsolutely. I said the same thing. This style is exactly what sucks the popularity out of college bball. We need rule changes that promote a more exciting style.
No, the game is just fine the way it is. The last thing we need is the NCAA screwing more things up. Some coaches play fast, others play slow. Good teams can adapt to either
If it's just fine, why all the publicity about declining popularity? Here's a good article from last March. Talks about the decline and need for further adjustments. To me, now is the time to tweak rules to speed the game up, increase scoring and raise the excitement.
http://www.si.com/college-basketball/2015/02/26/hoop-thoughts-college-basketball-scoring-pace
Kevin Ollie was handed over a really good team, kinda like Tubby did when we won it in 98.You can be a class act and really good coach, and it still takes time and some luck for most coaches (not named Kevin Ollie). Tony Bennett has done a great job at UVA, and I wonder what he would do at a top tier school?
Much truth in this post. I am generally impressed with Bennett, seems like a good guy and fairly rapidly made UVa very good in a way not seen there since Samson. However, his style of play is ultimately self defeating. One he's going to have a hard time recruiting well enough with that system to compete consistently with Duke, Carolina, etc. going to be hard to maintain what he's done, IOW. And this thing about underachieving in March won't help. Two, the style simply leaves very little margin for error - if the style is designed to ensure close games, you're going to lose some you shouldn't to a greater degree than other, more open styles of play. In short, many decry the current tendency to "overcoach", and UVa embodies that.....Contrast that with Boeheim--who did what all teams should do against teams like UVA, UNI, Wisconsin--you press them the entire game. Who cares if they score a few--they'll eventually screw up as they can't maintain that pace and it'll force the tempo to increase/more possessions means the more talented team will win. It's called coaching--and too often it's not applied in this era. Too many "system" and "control freaks" to allow kids to play the game.
Kevin Ollie was handed over a really good team, kinda like Tubby did when we won it in 98.
Seriously? Brogdon was ACC POY and DPOY. Plus a 1St team AA. Not to mention, I think Gill and Perrantes name popped up on a few AA list as well. Kind of hard to sit here and act like he's coaching a bunch of bums that can't play basketball, and achieving great things.He is really overachieving with the talent he has
Much truth in this post. I am generally impressed with Bennett, seems like a good guy and fairly rapidly made UVa very good in a way not seen there since Samson. However, his style of play is ultimately self defeating. One he's going to have a hard time recruiting well enough with that system to compete consistently with Duke, Carolina, etc. going to be hard to maintain what he's done, IOW. And this thing about underachieving in March won't help. Two, the style simply leaves very little margin for error - if the style is designed to ensure close games, you're going to lose some you shouldn't to a greater degree than other, more open styles of play. In short, many decry the current tendency to "overcoach", and UVa embodies that.....
My point is, he couldn't have went in his first season with the players he recruited & won the tournament. Same withTubby.They weren't that good. They were a 7 seed for a reason.
No, the game is just fine the way it is. The last thing we need is the NCAA screwing more things up. Some coaches play fast, others play slow. Good teams can adapt to either
Good thinking, ralphdaltonfan. I'm curious - what do you think of UK's offense under Calipari? He takes some shots on here for the way he coaches offense - but I think that comes from a group with a fairly limited and narrow understanding of offensive principles. if you have a more free-flowing style, applying certain principles and within a certain construct but allowing players to create within that construct - that to me is an ideal approach, but many disagree.....You have every right to like him/how he coaches. That's what makes talking about something fun/interesting. And undoubtedly his system has improved the program and worked. My belief is that it works due to coaches who don't game plan or prepare to dictate the tempo from teams like this, as stated previously. See how pressing them changed entire pace and initially Syracuse gave up 2 layups--but aside from that--they gave up 1 basket in last 9 1/2 minutes and 2 gift FT's to Brogdon that officials love to call to keep a game alive. (or so it seems to me)
Just notice certain trends in both coaching at the HS level and watching CBB that are interesting regarding system coaches. Here's a few
1. Its easier to defend them due to the shots coming from spots on court more then individual players. The systems mute offensive talent and are more about sets. So if you take away the spots--you force discomfort.
2. Run them off the 3/negate the 3 and you limit their offense--which is often very much like a 5 out approach you see in girls basketball. They'll stay in their pattern no matter the time/score and you saw that with Bennett today--he was running sets down 6.....he defended man in halfcourt instead of extending game/clock or trapping/pressing.
3. As was mentioned, they live to play close. Do that enough-you lose to teams you shouldn't. (see Georgetown under Thompson III in the NCAA's since his NBA talent left from the '06-'08 era and even then they had to survive BC and Vandy in games they should've won easily on way to '07 Final Four). So when you play to be close and are close and everyone is pulling for underdog and they can play carefree--you're still working for your spot shots, and running pattern.
Not trying to knock having a plan-but there is a time to slow some teams down (ND tried against UK last year and UNC this year) and a time to speed the game up. Adjusting is coaching. Preparing for your opponent is coaching. It's not "do what we do" and see how it ends up. I see this far too much and it's celebrated and taught at clinics. No one way to win--but if you notice winning coaches entrust players with being the focal point and amazing how the credit is given anyway to the coach if you do this. lol
Just seems like guys like Bennett get praised for stats they can control. His defense isn't that good-he takes away offensive possessions by being a horrific offensive coach. Brogdon being ACC Defensive POY is laughable. You saw what Richardson did to him in the 2nd Half alone. Basketball is lone sport where great offense beats great defense. You can't stop shots from being made if players/teams get going. Offense actually wins championships--and it's usually with a great backcourt along with a stud wing forward. Defense keeps you in games but think it only matters if it creates offense/easy baskets. UVA and teams that follow suit don't get much out of their defense-which forces them to have to shoot out of their minds and in a 6 game tournament over 3 weeks--is it realistic to think that happens? I say no--and so far proven to be case. Just my take and why I think talented teams being allowed to get up and down and make shots should be celebrated and are not only more fun to watch, but also more successful in terms of winning.
Or, how about just get better (i.e. more consistent) officiating that prevents the game from being entertaining (rugby in the paint, refs that appear to be divas, etc)?
Good thinking, ralphdaltonfan. I'm curious - what do you think of UK's offense under Calipari? He takes some shots on here for the way he coaches offense - but I think that comes from a group with a fairly limited and narrow understanding of offensive principles. if you have a more free-flowing style, applying certain principles and within a certain construct but allowing players to create within that construct - that to me is an ideal approach, but many disagree.....
Contrast that with Boeheim--who did what all teams should do against teams like UVA, UNI, Wisconsin--you press them the entire game.
Cal's offensive approach adjusts to type of team he has--although I'm not a fan of how conservative he tends to get in late game situations or in March--that '12 team he called off dogs on Kansas when he could've ran them out of the Superdome and game got far too interesting when it should've been Eloy Vargas and Twany Beckham time. lol
Think UK offense overall is fine--he adjusts to what he has (most coaches don't) and he's played differently based on personnel. One underrated aspect that I think helps UK kids is they learn to play with bigger/taller players and when going to NBA-the floor shrinks--they make court look small. UK does a very difficult thing well-they get their kids to adjust to playing with size. Sounds simple but it's not. Floor spacing is so important and it's why the success at several positions has shown.
If I were to nitpick, I'd say that I'd like to see more offense from his defense--create more fastbreaks from blocked shots, stops but he's one of the best in business and record speaks for itself. Think '15 heartbreaker has jaded too many fans against him. He did a great job of adjusting to this year's team and knowing how they needed to play to be their best. He does so every season and even in '13, he'd have made tournament/run if Nerlens doesn't get hurt. Imagine if Duke lost Ingram this year, how they'd have mentioned that daily. Nerlens injury was seen as if it didn't happen by media--they just talk of "NIT".....and he had a PG situation where I'm guessing he thought Teague would've stayed another year but left.
Correct, but Syracuse only pressed for, what, 5 minutes at most? It changed the game, though.
Great post, and I agree (especially with the bolded). The tightened sphincter in close/late games is yikes, but otherwise he's pretty solid on O, especially considering he's a defensive coach and he's dealing with constant roster turnover.
My point is, he couldn't have went in his first season with the players he recruited & won the tournament. Same withTubby.
Solid take, and yes, Teague is one of 2 or 3 that he specifically mentions as far as thinking he'd come back.Cal's offensive approach adjusts to type of team he has--although I'm not a fan of how conservative he tends to get in late game situations or in March--that '12 team he called off dogs on Kansas when he could've ran them out of the Superdome and game got far too interesting when it should've been Eloy Vargas and Twany Beckham time. lol
Think UK offense overall is fine--he adjusts to what he has (most coaches don't) and he's played differently based on personnel. One underrated aspect that I think helps UK kids is they learn to play with bigger/taller players and when going to NBA-the floor shrinks--they make court look small. UK does a very difficult thing well-they get their kids to adjust to playing with size. Sounds simple but it's not. Floor spacing is so important and it's why the success at several positions has shown.
If I were to nitpick, I'd say that I'd like to see more offense from his defense--create more fastbreaks from blocked shots, stops but he's one of the best in business and record speaks for itself. Think '15 heartbreaker has jaded too many fans against him. He did a great job of adjusting to this year's team and knowing how they needed to play to be their best. He does so every season and even in '13, he'd have made tournament/run if Nerlens doesn't get hurt. Imagine if Duke lost Ingram this year, how they'd have mentioned that daily. Nerlens injury was seen as if it didn't happen by media--they just talk of "NIT".....and he had a PG situation where I'm guessing he thought Teague would've stayed another year but left.
Solid take, and yes, Teague is one of 2 or 3 that he specifically mentions as far as thinking he'd come back.
Agree on the late game situations. I think for him it's basic math. If there are 6 minutes left in the game, and I have an 8 point lead, then the best thing for me to do is slow the thing down, limit your possessions, and if you only have the ball 12 times rather than 19 times (whatever) it's going to be more difficult for you to catch me. But it doesn't really jive with a coach known for letting his kids play, for making the program about them, etc.
I will say - at the risk of very amateur psychology - that I just read Calipari's latest book (only book of his that I've read, coaches books are reliably awful). he talks so much about being a "grinder", he uses that phrase in several different ways. his dad was a "grinder" willing to work a horrible job, awful hours (coal miner) for the family to make it. He also talks about a team being comfortable being able to "grind" games. meaning, it's a tight one, and they have to be mentally and physically tough enough to weather the storm and come out on top. Point is, it's clear that he regards being able to "grind" as being a virtue of sorts, and one of the biggest compliments he can give a person. Epiphany: grinding out the end of a game isn't playing not to lose, isn't taking away freedom from kids, isn't being a control freak. none of the negatives. to him, it's the best, most honorable, most virtuous thing. Grinding.
Like I said, amateur hour psychology.......
Like your take.......
Rat Face Coach K could take a few notes from Coach Bennett.
I really agree. If you are efficient on offense you win most of your games.BTW, this reminds me of a thought I had last night watching UNC. I know Roy takes lumps (which is silly, but that's the internet).....but his teams - his good ones anyway -- put so much pressure on you, on the offensive end. Meaning, you know they are going to score and score in bunches. and the pressure is on you to keep up. Which is different, I think, than just about any other big time program. Most coaches want to exert pressure through defense, to make it difficult to score. I was trying to think of others who do it like Roy does. K has had a couple of teams that could score like that. I'm not talking about Loyola Marymount or any gimmick situation.....