drizzlybear said:
NathanAllen said:
Bear8995 said:
I've been thinking a lot about how we got here.
When Fox got here, he was just trying to get bodies to play. Vanover, Sueing and McNeill left and they would have represented 3 of the 5 starting positions had they stayed. Anticevich was returning. Austin, Kelly and Bradley were coming in/becoming eligible. The next 3 best players were JHD, Roman Davis and Jacobi Gordon, not really Pac 12 players. We were in trouble.
So he grabbed Brown (we needed a point guard). He got Kareem South as a one year rental (we needed outside shooting). He got KK, an athletic wing with potential (probably worth the gamble). Thiemann and Thorpe (good to have some big bodies). And finally Klonaras (looked good enough on tape to take a chance).
Young team but not a good outside shooting team. We needed that to improve. He slowed the game down, got Paris to become more of a passer and we showed signs of life towards the end of last season.
We lose South and Austin and in the search for some long distance shooters, he grabs Foreman and Betley. We had some success with Mullins so Betley made sense and Foreman could play PG so he was a hedge if Hyder couldn't play. He also gets Bowser and Celestine. Longer, athletic wings.
Then we have a bit of bad luck (and trust me, I HATE making excuses). COVID protocols. We lose 2 weeks of practice. Bradley gets hurt not once, but twice, then gets sick in teh past 2 weeks missing practice all week. I still don't think he is 100%. Grant has his appendix burst. He's out for 4 weeks. Losing Bradley twice (not to mention him being sick recently) especially hurts because the team can never seem to gain any continuity. That reflects in our inconsistent play from game to game and even within games.
Betley turns out to be a heady player, but can't shoot as well when he has to hurry his shot against more athletic competition. Same with Foreman. Both are liabilities defensively. Klonaras, KK and Thiemann get caught overseas and don't progress as much as they normally would under normal circumstances. Celestine is hurt for a good portion of the start of the season. Bowser would have ideally redshirted to gain some muscle.
In short, while other teams have been affected by the pandemic, it really hurt us when you factor in the injuries and how our team is made up with the number of foreign players we have. Switching lineups so often has made it difficult for us to establish any kind of continuity. I get it since we are losing and Fox feels the need to mix things up. But I think it has hindered our ability to execute at a higher level than we are seeing now.
The team needs to improve in just about every area. Rebounding. Defense. Shooting. Taking care of the ball (turnovers).
Next year, we have Roberson, Alajiki and Anyanwu coming in. Judging by Fox's reaction to Betley coming out of today's game, I'm guessing he doesn't come back. I think Betley also realizes that he is playing in a league over his head a bit. I would guess that Klonaras will move on at some point. Can't be fun sitting on the bench. Hopefully we can get another point guard so Hyder can play off the ball as he is not a point guard. Not sure he is Pac 12 material either way.
Assuming everyone is healthy and comes back, the starting lineup will likely be Brown, Bradley, Celestine, Kelly and Anticevich. The 3 freshmen should all play as weill as Bowser. Thorpe and Thiemann will provide some size but I just don't see them making a huge impact on the progarm while they are here. Hyder or Foreman can hopefully spell Brown for a few minutes but neither is capable of playing a lot of minutes IMO. We shouldn't end up last like this year but I think the key is who Fox brings in next year. If we get a class similar to this years, we should be OK going forward (we do need a good point guard in this class). If we take a step back, we will be at the bottom of the conference for quite a while necessitating a change at the top.
I hope Fox is able to pull it off as I do think we need some continuity. We seemto start over (meaning at the bottom) every time a new coach comes in and that makes it really hard for us to gain traction as a program.
While I really like the general level-headedness and positivity of your overall post/thoughts, I want to make a couple of points.
First, Fox is not responsible for Brown and Thorpe being in Berkeley. They both signed LOI before Wyking Jones left. Yes, Fox had to re-recruit them to make sure they didn't ask out of their LOI, but that's a lot easier to do than the initial recruitment, which Jones gets credit for.
Second, my personal opinion is Cal has had it very easy regarding COVID compared to other teams. Yes, I get that they had the shut down at the beginning of the season, but that was it. They changed the opponent of their opening game to Oregon State and that's literally the only schedule disruption they've had. Maybe that caused them to get a slower start, and maybe it disadvantaged them to play ASU and UCLA in early-December, but Cal had a VERY light non-con load. It didn't play a single team ranked inside KenPom's top-100. Even if they were disrupted early-on, it doesn't change the fact they lost 11 of their last 12 games.
It's true that Cal has had little in-season schedule disruption, but the hit to the off-season has been catastrophic for preparing for this season. I have the impression that it was particularly hard for Cal because: a) most teams didn't have the kind of local restrictions Cal had, b) with a disproportionate number of foreign players, it was harder/later for Cal to get its players back together and working/training, and c) with an unusually long rotation including a number of new players, the lack of a useful pre-season hit Cal particularly hard. Add to the preseason disruption the substantial losses of Bradley and GA to injury mid-season, and I believe it's fair to say that this team has had an uphill battle getting a sense of cohesion this season.
You could visibly see the lack of conditioning on the players (especially, for example, Kelly, whose play has markedly improved over the course of the season as his conditioning has improved and he has avoided significant injury), and to me it took until the second UCLA game for them to start looking like a cohesive unit at all. And while some mock the notion that competitive losses are different from non-competitive losses, or that there's even such a thing as a competitive loss, it's clear to me that this team has generally played much better basketball in the second half of the season.
Look, I appreciate you, but almost every post completely downplays the bad, exaggerates the good, and presents an unrealistic view of the future. They ignore results or data to present some eye test and the problem is the eyes are covered in 2 inch thick rose colored glasses. Every team needs fans like you. But they also need people who are going to counter with some reality.
Covid is just an excuse at this point. There is no way Cal got hit hardest by Covid. Everybody had to deal with it. Using it now, months after it had any impact is not warranted and is basically a get out of jail free card. It is reasonable that it might have impacted them early in the season. But it is not like some disrupted practice is something that permanently sets you back. They have had three months to catch up and they are playing some of their worst basketball right now.
Lack of conditioning is the last thing you should use as an excuse. My 15 year old had zoom conditioning with her not elite club team during spring and summer when the coach knew there was basically no chance they'd play a season. No Covid restrictions stopped anyone from going outdoors and running. It is absolutely criminal if this coaching staff didn't keep them in shape. (which, by the way, I don't think is true. What you see as a conditioning issue, I see as the cream rising to the top of each game when the chips are down).
You have pointed to the UCLA game over and over and over. Let's get a little real about the UCLA game. Grant had his career best game. That is it. That is all that happened. If you take Grant's numbers out of the stats, the team went 13 of 42 shooting. They were outrebounded in the game 29-20. That is not a team that turned the corner and started playing like a cohesive unit. That is one guy played out of his mind and shot 8-11, 5-5 from three. And with that ridiculous performance by Grant, we still only scored 57. The team was playing to exactly the same level they have the rest of the year.
And despite the excuses - Covid, conditioning, Grant and Matt being out, and your assertion that they somehow found cohesion at UCLA, they have played the last 10 games, fully conditioned, full cohesion, full roster, with Matt and Grant statistically being the same as usual, and they have gone 1-9. And they have played especially poorly of late.
No one, especially me, EVER mocked the notion of competitive losses being better than non competitive losses. That is a strawman others created. Actually look at our results. You have a hard time arguing that we have gotten more competitive. At best it is a mixed bag. We were clearly less competitive the second time around against WSU, Utah and Washington. I would say we were clearly less competitive against Oregon but others might argue. Stanford is less relevant because we played them in the same week, but I we've had that debate. We were clearly more competitive against UCLA, ASU, and Colorado. We only played USC and Arizona once, but they were in the last ten games and we lost both and got trounced by Arizona. I would say OSU is a wash. We shot out of our minds for the first third of the game and sucked for the rest having one of our worst offensive halves of the season. Bottom line, mixed bag at best.
Your argument that this team played better as the season went on is just not born out. They played the same 4 teams to start the conference season as they did to finish it. The Oregons and the Washingtons. At the start of the season they went 1-3 with a total point differential of negative 27. At the end of the season against the same opponents, they went 0-4 with a total point differential of negative 45. Our Sagarin predictor rating, which is based on strength of schedule and scores over the entire season, is 152. Our Sagarin recent rating, which is the same as predictor except that it weights the most recent games more, is a horrible 212. As Captain America says "I can do this all day". By every objective measure, the team is getting worse as the season goes on. Your only argument is your eyes. You need to consider the possibility that in your "eye test", your eyes are seeing what they want to see.
As I said, I appreciate you and every team needs fans like you that will stay positive no matter what. Great for you. But reality needs to be there as well. Be positive about the next game. Believe in the team. Go to the game (or sit in front of your television as it were) and cheer your head off. When the game is over, when the season is over, you need to apply some reasoning instead of all emotion. Discussing the direction of the program should not be based on emotional fandom. If you want to argue that this is the best Cal can do, fine. But we have to argue based on some truths and the truth by any objective measure is this is a last place team that got worse as the season progressed.