HearstMining said:
NathanAllen said:
Big C said:
OaktownBear said:
HoopDreams said:
i said we will see who the better coach is since they just played each other
Fox > Haase
Sigh
Hey, 76-70... we were competitive!
Kidding, obviously. Lately, I'm seeing a team that is getting killed by other teams' length. Some teams can compensate for that in other areas, but we cannot, as we have no other areas in which we excel.
Fox spoke a bit about this in the post-game presser. Essentially said until the roster gets bigger, there's not much they can do and they need to be almost perfect in effort and execution to compete. Also mentioned that the team was better on defense last year with the same guys, so it doesn't necessarily take more size on the roster.
He mentioned this a bit, but Cal doesn't have someone that can matchup with the stretch-forwards many other Pac-12 teams have. Fox did say Kelly, Thorpe, and Thiemann don't have the speed to match players like Da Silva and Anticevich and Kuany don't have the size to match guys like Da Silva.
Fox is the coach, so argueably knows better than I do, but I don't exactly think Da Silva is the second coming of Carl Malone. My impression from watching parts of a few games is:
- Da Silva is a polished player: has a good inside and midrange game, and good footwork.
- He's not a three-point threat - rarely shoots it. So, is he really a "stretch-forward"?
- Average strength and quickness - not an astonishing physical specimen
Fox is essentially saying that he can't teach his players to compensate for a slight (not major) physical mismatch when playing defense. That's a concern.
Da Silva could be the P12 Player of the Year. He leads the conference in scoring and is top-five in rebounding and field goal percentage. I'm not saying he gets it, but at this point in the season, he's squarely in the running for it. He's one of the most efficient players in the conference. (Kenpom only puts Evan Mobley ahead of him in overall efficiency.)
I think you're misinterpreting what Fox said and over-simplifying it, but that's my fault for paraphrasing him and not putting his entire quote in the post.
Here's what he actually said from our recap on the game:
"We have no one that matches up with him on our roster," Fox said. "He's long and he's quick and I think he uses his quickness and speed really more so when I think he played more as a power player."
Fox said Da Silva is too fast for Cal's traditional post players in Andre Kelly, Lars Thiemann and D.J. Thorpe and too big for Grant Anticevich and Kuany Kuany.
"We made an attempt to take him off his spot a bit, maybe take away some angles," Fox continued. "But we really didn't do a good job."
I'll let you interpret that how you like, but wanted to make sure you have the entire quote I was referring to instead of just my commentary.
As for the "stretch-four," Da Silva is shooting 33.3% on 36 three-point attempts this year. Not a huge amount, but enough to keep a defense honest. He took more attempts than anyone else for Stanford in the second game between Stanford and Cal. But he also can stretch the defense by facing up his defender and driving around him. He did this quite a bit in the first game in Berkeley. It wasn't always pretty, but he usually got around whomever Cal had defending him.
I'm not sure how you define stretch-four, but my loose definition is any player who is in the traditional power forward position but has the ability to stretch a defense or guard on the perimeter. My opinion is Da Silva does both of those things and plays more away from the hoop than a traditional post-up forward.