have I missed any reference to Foreman? He did not play against ASU. or, did I misread the boxscore?
oskidunker said:
We promptly went down by double digits and never really recovered.
Civil Bear said:oskidunker said:
We promptly went down by double digits and never really recovered.
You mean other than taking back the lead at halftime.
That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
We must be watching different games. I feel like I've watched so many games where teams are shooting 30 or 40 free throws a game. That's just criminal. I love college hoops and try to watch games every day during the season, but I can't handle games that get into the 25+ free-throw attempt range. No flow or continuity whatsoever.BeachedBear said:I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
NathanAllen said:We must be watching different games. I feel like I've watched so many games where teams are shooting 30 or 40 free throws a game. That's just criminal. I love college hoops and try to watch games every day during the season, but I can't handle games that get into the 25+ free-throw attempt range. No flow or continuity whatsoever.BeachedBear said:I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
I'm glad we have Betley and Foreman but I never expected them to be power conference players. IMHO the only grad transfer who really helped us was Grant Mullins.Big C said:
18 minutes, 1-6 from the field. He was on the floor when we made our run at the end of the first half.
Not too much from Foreman or, especially, Betley lately. Opposing teams probably know to guard them beyond the arc now.
I wish we had one good PG instead of three mediocre ones.
I'm not sure what you were seeing in this game. From the play by play description, Cal fell behind 12 points with 10 minutes to go in the half, and fought back to take the lead by 1 at the half, including missing a three and a layup in the last minute, and despite having only TWO free throw attempts in the entire half. I think Cal recovered quite nicely.oskidunker said:
He played. Made a three. Missed a lot.i think Fox started Brown and Hyder for defense. We promptly went down by double digits and never really recovered.
https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/boxscore?gameId=401265394
Celistine had a couple of nifty assists, set some screens, and hit an open three. His impact is minimal as he is clearly not forcing things at this stage, but he is showing glimpses of things to come. It is also clear that he has taken over the rotation spot from Bowzer who was showing more athleticism and raw potential earlier in the season.SFCityBear said:I'm not sure what you were seeing in this game. From the play by play description, Cal fell behind 12 points with 10 minutes to go in the half, and fought back to take the lead by 1 at the half, including missing a three and a layup in the last minute, and despite having only TWO free throw attempts in the entire half. I think Cal recovered quite nicely.oskidunker said:
He played. Made a three. Missed a lot.i think Fox started Brown and Hyder for defense. We promptly went down by double digits and never really recovered.
https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/boxscore?gameId=401265394
In the second half, Cal got down quickly by 7 points with 15 minutes to go in the game, but quickly recovered again to take the lead by 2 with 11 minutes to go. With 7 minutes to go, Cal was still up by 2. ASU then gradually pulled ahead, and was up by 7 with 1:40 to go, and Cal was toast. Cal was never down more than 7 points in the 2nd half.
I will watch the video recording tomorrow. I am encouraged about what was said here about Celestine. Looking at the box score, he fouled out in only 17 minutes, which sounds like the freshmen Kelly and Thorpe. I want to see his playmaking, shooting, and skills. All I heard about him as a recruit was that he was a good shot.
SFCityBear said:I'm not sure what you were seeing in this game. From the play by play description, Cal fell behind 12 points with 10 minutes to go in the half, and fought back to take the lead by 1 at the half, including missing a three and a layup in the last minute, and despite having only TWO free throw attempts in the entire half. I think Cal recovered quite nicely.oskidunker said:
He played. Made a three. Missed a lot.i think Fox started Brown and Hyder for defense. We promptly went down by double digits and never really recovered.
https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/boxscore?gameId=401265394
In the second half, Cal got down quickly by 7 points with 15 minutes to go in the game, but quickly recovered again to take the lead by 2 with 11 minutes to go. With 7 minutes to go, Cal was still up by 2. ASU then gradually pulled ahead, and was up by 7 with 1:40 to go, and Cal was toast. Cal was never down more than 7 points in the 2nd half.
I will watch the video recording tomorrow. I am encouraged about what was said here about Celestine. Looking at the box score, he fouled out in only 17 minutes, which sounds like the freshmen Kelly and Thorpe. I want to see his playmaking, shooting, and skills. All I heard about him as a recruit was that he was a good shot.
This is probably one of the most common pieces of misinformation among college hoops fans. There is no such thing as "Pac-12 refs" in college hoops. While there are refs that will do more Pac-12 games, it's generally based on regions because refs are getting to games in different cities usually three to four times a week. Conferences do not employ college basketball refs. I wish they did so there could be more accountability and review.93Bear said:NathanAllen said:We must be watching different games. I feel like I've watched so many games where teams are shooting 30 or 40 free throws a game. That's just criminal. I love college hoops and try to watch games every day during the season, but I can't handle games that get into the 25+ free-throw attempt range. No flow or continuity whatsoever.BeachedBear said:I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
Nathan, I'm not sure how long you've been following Pac 12 basketball but for as long as I can remember (30+ years) Pac 12 refs have been calling way more ticky tack fouls than refs in any other conference. The disparity was so great that Big East basketball looked like a completely different sport and Pac 12 teams usually looked confused during the NCAA tournament by the lack of calls.
This year there does seem to be more flow and fewer ticky tack fouls compared to other years but that's just a personal observation.
now we know who to blame for Cal's lossNathanAllen said:This is probably one of the most common pieces of misinformation among college hoops fans. There is no such thing as "Pac-12 refs" in college hoops. While there are refs that will do more Pac-12 games, it's generally based on regions because refs are getting to games in different cities usually three to four times a week. Conferences do not employ college basketball refs. I wish they did so there could be more accountability and review.93Bear said:NathanAllen said:We must be watching different games. I feel like I've watched so many games where teams are shooting 30 or 40 free throws a game. That's just criminal. I love college hoops and try to watch games every day during the season, but I can't handle games that get into the 25+ free-throw attempt range. No flow or continuity whatsoever.BeachedBear said:I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
Nathan, I'm not sure how long you've been following Pac 12 basketball but for as long as I can remember (30+ years) Pac 12 refs have been calling way more ticky tack fouls than refs in any other conference. The disparity was so great that Big East basketball looked like a completely different sport and Pac 12 teams usually looked confused during the NCAA tournament by the lack of calls.
This year there does seem to be more flow and fewer ticky tack fouls compared to other years but that's just a personal observation.
For example, in Cal's last game in Tempe, the refs were Deron White, Deldre Carr, and Jim Schipper.
So far this season, White has reffed games in the Pac-12, MWC, and WCC. He's done two Cal games, both were against ASU. Carr has also done Pac-12, MWC, and WCC games this year and reffed in the Cal game against Utah (in addition to the latest ASU game). Schipper has done games in the Pac-12, MWC, WCC, and MAC in the Midwest. In addition to the last Cal game, he reffed the Cal game in Eugene earlier this year.
NathanAllen said:This is probably one of the most common pieces of misinformation among college hoops fans. There is no such thing as "Pac-12 refs" in college hoops. While there are refs that will do more Pac-12 games, it's generally based on regions because refs are getting to games in different cities usually three to four times a week. Conferences do not employ college basketball refs. I wish they did so there could be more accountability and review.93Bear said:NathanAllen said:We must be watching different games. I feel like I've watched so many games where teams are shooting 30 or 40 free throws a game. That's just criminal. I love college hoops and try to watch games every day during the season, but I can't handle games that get into the 25+ free-throw attempt range. No flow or continuity whatsoever.BeachedBear said:I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
Nathan, I'm not sure how long you've been following Pac 12 basketball but for as long as I can remember (30+ years) Pac 12 refs have been calling way more ticky tack fouls than refs in any other conference. The disparity was so great that Big East basketball looked like a completely different sport and Pac 12 teams usually looked confused during the NCAA tournament by the lack of calls.
This year there does seem to be more flow and fewer ticky tack fouls compared to other years but that's just a personal observation.
For example, in Cal's last game in Tempe, the refs were Deron White, Deldre Carr, and Jim Schipper.
So far this season, White has reffed games in the Pac-12, MWC, and WCC. He's done two Cal games, both were against ASU. Carr has also done Pac-12, MWC, and WCC games this year and reffed in the Cal game against Utah (in addition to the latest ASU game). Schipper has done games in the Pac-12, MWC, WCC, and MAC in the Midwest. In addition to the last Cal game, he reffed the Cal game in Eugene earlier this year.
I think Nathan should have used mis-characterization vs misinformation as this has always been the case. But is does re-inforce the issue that the ref pool struggles with the difference in styles between the P12 and the WCC, WAC, MWC & GW conferences. I'm sure the other regions have similar situations and would be interesting in comparing the pools. I could imagine that a ref pool that covers Big East, ACC & SEC might have different tendencies.Big C said:NathanAllen said:This is probably one of the most common pieces of misinformation among college hoops fans. There is no such thing as "Pac-12 refs" in college hoops. While there are refs that will do more Pac-12 games, it's generally based on regions because refs are getting to games in different cities usually three to four times a week. Conferences do not employ college basketball refs. I wish they did so there could be more accountability and review.93Bear said:NathanAllen said:We must be watching different games. I feel like I've watched so many games where teams are shooting 30 or 40 free throws a game. That's just criminal. I love college hoops and try to watch games every day during the season, but I can't handle games that get into the 25+ free-throw attempt range. No flow or continuity whatsoever.BeachedBear said:I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
Nathan, I'm not sure how long you've been following Pac 12 basketball but for as long as I can remember (30+ years) Pac 12 refs have been calling way more ticky tack fouls than refs in any other conference. The disparity was so great that Big East basketball looked like a completely different sport and Pac 12 teams usually looked confused during the NCAA tournament by the lack of calls.
This year there does seem to be more flow and fewer ticky tack fouls compared to other years but that's just a personal observation.
For example, in Cal's last game in Tempe, the refs were Deron White, Deldre Carr, and Jim Schipper.
So far this season, White has reffed games in the Pac-12, MWC, and WCC. He's done two Cal games, both were against ASU. Carr has also done Pac-12, MWC, and WCC games this year and reffed in the Cal game against Utah (in addition to the latest ASU game). Schipper has done games in the Pac-12, MWC, WCC, and MAC in the Midwest. In addition to the last Cal game, he reffed the Cal game in Eugene earlier this year.
Good info! Nevertheless, there is a pool of referees who do most of the conference games.
I have been attending the vast majority of Cal home games for a few decades, pretty much with the same group. There must be 25-30 games, maybe more, in which one of us has exclaimed, "I know we've said this before, but that has got to be the WORST REFEREED game I've ever seen!" (with nods and agreement all around)
I watched a Mizzou/Auburn game this past week that had 71 foul shots. Auburn's Sharife Cooper shot 21 FT attempts himself. This is not just a Pac-12/western region issue. College officiating across the country can be unbearable at times.BeachedBear said:I think Nathan should have used mis-characterization vs misinformation as this has always been the case. But is does re-inforce the issue that the ref pool struggles with the difference in styles between the P12 and the WCC, WAC, MWC & GW conferences. I'm sure the other regions have similar situations and would be interesting in comparing the pools. I could imagine that a ref pool that covers Big East, ACC & SEC might have different tendencies.Big C said:NathanAllen said:This is probably one of the most common pieces of misinformation among college hoops fans. There is no such thing as "Pac-12 refs" in college hoops. While there are refs that will do more Pac-12 games, it's generally based on regions because refs are getting to games in different cities usually three to four times a week. Conferences do not employ college basketball refs. I wish they did so there could be more accountability and review.93Bear said:NathanAllen said:We must be watching different games. I feel like I've watched so many games where teams are shooting 30 or 40 free throws a game. That's just criminal. I love college hoops and try to watch games every day during the season, but I can't handle games that get into the 25+ free-throw attempt range. No flow or continuity whatsoever.BeachedBear said:I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
Nathan, I'm not sure how long you've been following Pac 12 basketball but for as long as I can remember (30+ years) Pac 12 refs have been calling way more ticky tack fouls than refs in any other conference. The disparity was so great that Big East basketball looked like a completely different sport and Pac 12 teams usually looked confused during the NCAA tournament by the lack of calls.
This year there does seem to be more flow and fewer ticky tack fouls compared to other years but that's just a personal observation.
For example, in Cal's last game in Tempe, the refs were Deron White, Deldre Carr, and Jim Schipper.
So far this season, White has reffed games in the Pac-12, MWC, and WCC. He's done two Cal games, both were against ASU. Carr has also done Pac-12, MWC, and WCC games this year and reffed in the Cal game against Utah (in addition to the latest ASU game). Schipper has done games in the Pac-12, MWC, WCC, and MAC in the Midwest. In addition to the last Cal game, he reffed the Cal game in Eugene earlier this year.
Good info! Nevertheless, there is a pool of referees who do most of the conference games.
I have been attending the vast majority of Cal home games for a few decades, pretty much with the same group. There must be 25-30 games, maybe more, in which one of us has exclaimed, "I know we've said this before, but that has got to be the WORST REFEREED game I've ever seen!" (with nods and agreement all around)
However, the disparity (regional differences) IMHO has become much less than it was 10 or 20 years ago.
I watched part of that Mizz/Aub game too and quite frankly, from what I saw, the best chance you had to stop Cooper was to foul him and hope the ref didn't call it....the kid was lights out good....NathanAllen said:I watched a Mizzou/Auburn game this past week that had 71 foul shots. Auburn's Sharife Cooper shot 21 FT attempts himself. This is not just a Pac-12/western region issue. College officiating across the country can be unbearable at times.BeachedBear said:I think Nathan should have used mis-characterization vs misinformation as this has always been the case. But is does re-inforce the issue that the ref pool struggles with the difference in styles between the P12 and the WCC, WAC, MWC & GW conferences. I'm sure the other regions have similar situations and would be interesting in comparing the pools. I could imagine that a ref pool that covers Big East, ACC & SEC might have different tendencies.Big C said:NathanAllen said:This is probably one of the most common pieces of misinformation among college hoops fans. There is no such thing as "Pac-12 refs" in college hoops. While there are refs that will do more Pac-12 games, it's generally based on regions because refs are getting to games in different cities usually three to four times a week. Conferences do not employ college basketball refs. I wish they did so there could be more accountability and review.93Bear said:NathanAllen said:We must be watching different games. I feel like I've watched so many games where teams are shooting 30 or 40 free throws a game. That's just criminal. I love college hoops and try to watch games every day during the season, but I can't handle games that get into the 25+ free-throw attempt range. No flow or continuity whatsoever.BeachedBear said:I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
Nathan, I'm not sure how long you've been following Pac 12 basketball but for as long as I can remember (30+ years) Pac 12 refs have been calling way more ticky tack fouls than refs in any other conference. The disparity was so great that Big East basketball looked like a completely different sport and Pac 12 teams usually looked confused during the NCAA tournament by the lack of calls.
This year there does seem to be more flow and fewer ticky tack fouls compared to other years but that's just a personal observation.
For example, in Cal's last game in Tempe, the refs were Deron White, Deldre Carr, and Jim Schipper.
So far this season, White has reffed games in the Pac-12, MWC, and WCC. He's done two Cal games, both were against ASU. Carr has also done Pac-12, MWC, and WCC games this year and reffed in the Cal game against Utah (in addition to the latest ASU game). Schipper has done games in the Pac-12, MWC, WCC, and MAC in the Midwest. In addition to the last Cal game, he reffed the Cal game in Eugene earlier this year.
Good info! Nevertheless, there is a pool of referees who do most of the conference games.
I have been attending the vast majority of Cal home games for a few decades, pretty much with the same group. There must be 25-30 games, maybe more, in which one of us has exclaimed, "I know we've said this before, but that has got to be the WORST REFEREED game I've ever seen!" (with nods and agreement all around)
However, the disparity (regional differences) IMHO has become much less than it was 10 or 20 years ago.
He's definitely SEC POY material, especially if he didn't have eligibility issues. But 71 foul shots in a 40-minute game?! There were a ton of ticky-tacky calls going both ways, IMO.bearmanpg said:I watched part of that Mizz/Aub game too and quite frankly, from what I saw, the best chance you had to stop Cooper was to foul him and hope the ref didn't call it....the kid was lights out good....NathanAllen said:I watched a Mizzou/Auburn game this past week that had 71 foul shots. Auburn's Sharife Cooper shot 21 FT attempts himself. This is not just a Pac-12/western region issue. College officiating across the country can be unbearable at times.BeachedBear said:I think Nathan should have used mis-characterization vs misinformation as this has always been the case. But is does re-inforce the issue that the ref pool struggles with the difference in styles between the P12 and the WCC, WAC, MWC & GW conferences. I'm sure the other regions have similar situations and would be interesting in comparing the pools. I could imagine that a ref pool that covers Big East, ACC & SEC might have different tendencies.Big C said:NathanAllen said:This is probably one of the most common pieces of misinformation among college hoops fans. There is no such thing as "Pac-12 refs" in college hoops. While there are refs that will do more Pac-12 games, it's generally based on regions because refs are getting to games in different cities usually three to four times a week. Conferences do not employ college basketball refs. I wish they did so there could be more accountability and review.93Bear said:NathanAllen said:We must be watching different games. I feel like I've watched so many games where teams are shooting 30 or 40 free throws a game. That's just criminal. I love college hoops and try to watch games every day during the season, but I can't handle games that get into the 25+ free-throw attempt range. No flow or continuity whatsoever.BeachedBear said:I've noticed that more and more this season. I really like it - the game flows better. I'm guessing this is because there aren't any fans in the stands like me constantly cursing and berating them.Civil Bear said:That said, the refs were really letting them play last night.NathanAllen said:
ASU fouls a lot and sends teams to the line a lot.
Here's a look at free-throw attempts Pac-12 opponents have had against ASU this year:
Cal - 17 attempts
UCLA - 24 attempts
USC - 32 attempts
Oregon State - 27 attempts
Arizona - 29 attempts
Arizona - 43 attempts
Cal - 18 attempts
Nathan, I'm not sure how long you've been following Pac 12 basketball but for as long as I can remember (30+ years) Pac 12 refs have been calling way more ticky tack fouls than refs in any other conference. The disparity was so great that Big East basketball looked like a completely different sport and Pac 12 teams usually looked confused during the NCAA tournament by the lack of calls.
This year there does seem to be more flow and fewer ticky tack fouls compared to other years but that's just a personal observation.
For example, in Cal's last game in Tempe, the refs were Deron White, Deldre Carr, and Jim Schipper.
So far this season, White has reffed games in the Pac-12, MWC, and WCC. He's done two Cal games, both were against ASU. Carr has also done Pac-12, MWC, and WCC games this year and reffed in the Cal game against Utah (in addition to the latest ASU game). Schipper has done games in the Pac-12, MWC, WCC, and MAC in the Midwest. In addition to the last Cal game, he reffed the Cal game in Eugene earlier this year.
Good info! Nevertheless, there is a pool of referees who do most of the conference games.
I have been attending the vast majority of Cal home games for a few decades, pretty much with the same group. There must be 25-30 games, maybe more, in which one of us has exclaimed, "I know we've said this before, but that has got to be the WORST REFEREED game I've ever seen!" (with nods and agreement all around)
However, the disparity (regional differences) IMHO has become much less than it was 10 or 20 years ago.
I agree. And at least one of the other fouls where he ran into a player he did not see, could have been avoided if there had been better communication, like a teammate calling out a screen.HoopDreams said:SFCityBear said:I'm not sure what you were seeing in this game. From the play by play description, Cal fell behind 12 points with 10 minutes to go in the half, and fought back to take the lead by 1 at the half, including missing a three and a layup in the last minute, and despite having only TWO free throw attempts in the entire half. I think Cal recovered quite nicely.oskidunker said:
He played. Made a three. Missed a lot.i think Fox started Brown and Hyder for defense. We promptly went down by double digits and never really recovered.
https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/boxscore?gameId=401265394
In the second half, Cal got down quickly by 7 points with 15 minutes to go in the game, but quickly recovered again to take the lead by 2 with 11 minutes to go. With 7 minutes to go, Cal was still up by 2. ASU then gradually pulled ahead, and was up by 7 with 1:40 to go, and Cal was toast. Cal was never down more than 7 points in the 2nd half.
I will watch the video recording tomorrow. I am encouraged about what was said here about Celestine. Looking at the box score, he fouled out in only 17 minutes, which sounds like the freshmen Kelly and Thorpe. I want to see his playmaking, shooting, and skills. All I heard about him as a recruit was that he was a good shot.
Celestine was guarding Remy a lot and Remy was hunting for fouls
Don't know why the refs reward this but the last foul on jalen was ridiculous
Take a look and see if you agree
Who is the third point guard? I thought Brown and Hyder were the only two. I haven't seen every game, but Foreman seems to be playing the shooting guard ( and not shooting it well, lately).Big C said:
18 minutes, 1-6 from the field. He was on the floor when we made our run at the end of the first half.
Not too much from Foreman or, especially, Betley lately. Opposing teams probably know to guard them beyond the arc now.
I wish we had one good PG instead of three mediocre ones.
Forman is third PG. trading shooting for defense.SFCityBear said:Who is the third point guard? I thought Brown and Hyder were the only two. I haven't seen every game, but Foreman seems to be playing the shooting guard ( and not shooting it well, lately).Big C said:
18 minutes, 1-6 from the field. He was on the floor when we made our run at the end of the first half.
Not too much from Foreman or, especially, Betley lately. Opposing teams probably know to guard them beyond the arc now.
I wish we had one good PG instead of three mediocre ones.
Maybe Fox could try Celestine at the point. He seems to pass better than all three guards I mentioned above. Better instincts, better looking passes. If he has any kind of mid-range game, let's give hm a shot.
Hyder and Brown have poor shot selection. They both make up their minds to take it to the rim, but can't seem to foresee a double-team. Brown needs to learn that while he has great speed, he can't beat two or three defenders to the basket, if they are well positioned. He need to learn floaters, pull-ups and fall back jump shots, instead of taking it to the rim every time, getting doubled and losing the ball.