watching games it's interesting the perception of many peopledrizzlybear said:sluggo said:I counted for a half and posted here. I think it was like 6 in the half. Not literal.drizzlybear said:sluggo said:Last year Cal ran no off-ball screens. This year Cal ran no off-ball screens. Any bets on next year? Should I ask Wilner?drizzlybear said:sluggo said:It is completely fair. Tinkle did not build a great program at OSU. He is just a good coach who puts his team in a position to have success if they get a few breaks. Similar to Mike M., Thad Boyle, Kyle Smith and Larry K.. The formula is you hire a coach who is good at Xs and Os and player development. Every so often, the planets will align and you will have success. It is no coincidence that the best Cal coach of my lifetime is the only one to win a conference championship in my lifetime.SFCityBear said:That is unfair, just another chance to bash the current Cal coach.sluggo said:Wayne Tinkle versus Mark Fox.philbert said:
Go Beavs! If they can make the elite 8, why can't Cal?
Wayne Tinkle is a good coach, but it took him 7 years to have this good team at Oregon State. He still hasn't had a 20 win season at OSU. And much of his success, maybe even allowing him to hold his job was he brought along his son, who was arguably his best player for 4 seasons.The year that Tres Tinkle was hurt, and played only 6 games, Wayne Tinkle's OSU team went 5-27, right down there with Fox's season this year and both Wyking Jones' seasons in terms of failure. Unfortunately, Fox did not bring a son of Tres Tinkle's caliber with him to Cal.
It takes time to build a winner at schools like OSU and Cal. Both schools had great basketball success in the past, and both have suffered a loss of basketball reputation over time. It is hard to recruit to either school, and hard to find the money to pay a proven coach. It took Larry Kristowiak four years to have a good team, a 20-win team at Utah. It just takes time.
When Monty came Cal looked good right away. It was night and day compared to Braun, who was incompetent like Fox. Every Tinkle team plays at or above their talent. Fox's team looked like crap last year and this year. And they will next year and every year until he is fired. I am looking forward to that day.
Obviously you're entitled to your opinion, but it's worth noting that there are informed non-cal fans who believe Fox did very well last year. Heck, Jon Wilner voted Fox Pac12 coach of the year last year.
And while you've said you rely on your personal "eye test" over the 7 years of Tinkle's poor-to-abysmal records at OSU (including 1-17 in Year 3), I simply don't buy that if Wayne Tinkle were coaching at Cal with that kind of performance over seven years, that you'd be satisfied and supportive. I think you're falling for, and exploiting, Tinkle's glass slipper moment.
I mentioned that I liked Tinkle before his NCAA run, probably after he beat Cal for the third time. I supported Monty win or lose because he was good at his job. It is all I want. Results will vary.
Wait, I'm stuck on you saying Cal ran no off-ball screens. I assume you're not speaking literally. Do you mean you feel they should have run more off-ball screens? Because I'm pretty sure nearly every single offensive set includes multiple off-ball screens.
OK, I can't believe I had to do this, but your comment really shocked me. I just watched 10 Cal possessions in their conference tournament loss vs Colorado. They were the first ten possessions of a P12Net rebroadcast of the game (the most recent game still on my DVR). They are not the first ten possessions of the game because the rebroadcast jumped ahead "due to time constraints" from the 16:55 mark to the 10:51 mark of H1.
Possession 1: two off-ball screens (JC-GA, LT-GA)
Possession 2: one off-ball screen (GA-MB)
Possession 3: two off-ball screens (double screen for MB, GA-JC)
Possession 4: no off-ball screen
Possession 5: no off-ball screen
(Pac12 Net rebroadcast jumps ahead to 10:51)
Possession 6: one off-ball screen (Thorpe-MF)
Possession 7: three off-ball screens (Thorpe-Betley, Thorpe-GA, GA-MB)
Possession 8: no off-ball screen
Possession 9: N/A, early turnover
Possession 10: three off-ball screens (JB-GA, JC-AK, GA-MB)
These ten possessions and 11 documented off-ball screens occurred in less than five minutes of game time. I don't know what game you watched where you said you saw only 6 off-ball screens in half a game, but in this game Cal reached 6 off-ball screens (and I'm talking actual, feet-set screens, not merely players crossing paths) within the game's first three possessions. Not including the early turnover possession, 6 of Cal's first 9 possessions shown in this broadcast included off-ball screens, and four of those six included multiple off-ball screens within the possession.
So those number are way in excess of what you assert. Nevertheless, for comparison I also tracked Colorado's off-ball screens during the same portion of the broadcast. In their first ten possessions, two were transition possessions so I obviously won't count those (to be clear, though, neither of those possessions had any off-ball screens), and two more had zero off-ball possessions. That left six possessions of eight possessions with off-ball screens: one with one OBS, two with two, and three with three.
And while this was certainly a fairly small sample size, I'll note that on only two of those possessions was the Colorado shot taken or the play created by a person for whom an off-ball screen was made. I'll also note that Colorado did not make a basket nor getting a shooting foul on any of these possessions.
My conclusion from this mini-study is that in this portion of the broadcast of this particular game, selected essentially at random, there was no appreciable difference in the two teams' use of off-ball screens. Colorado had slightly more off-ball screens, but that is explained by Cal actually having made more baskets than Colorado during that portion of the broadcast (allowing them more opportunity to take the next possession in a set offense). In both teams' cases, basically every possession off a dead ball or made basket involved set piece that included multiple off-ball screens, and few possessions for either team otherwise did.
Of course, this was really an absurd study for me to do. Look, I know you to be a smart person in your field (so many of us have learned so much from you and the thread you've led on the COVID science topic, for which I am extremely appreciative), but the notion that any of us spectator fans would have the knowledge to judge long-time, high-level, successful college basketball coaches such as Fox and Johnson, etc., on the basis that we think they essentially don't do off-ball screens (which appears to not even be accurate), is, frankly, absurd and insulting.
during the game it's hard to accurately see it as we are generally caught up with the game and score, momentum, big plays or runs, etc.
We rarely truly see what's happening off the ball, or what the opponent is really doing.
During the offseason, I watch a few games like I was scouting the team. It's also easier to be more objective, and I turn off the sound as it's a distraction.
I am often surprised what I see. Sometimes it confirms by perception, but often times it doesn't. I've already watched the stanford game (fast forward is great for commercials)
However, listening to this board over the various coaches, there are some very common criticisms (Monty, Bozeman and WK seem to be the exception as their offenses were discernibly different to most cal fans that watch the team closely)
I also think many people don't recognize that in the modern college game, coaches use a variety of styles and looks throughout a game. For example, I was watching part of the OSU game, and Loyola Chicago was sometimes running an inside-out game, sometimes running a dribble drive offense, and sometimes just trying to space the floor with quick passing