Hope and Meaning for Cal Basketball - Some specifics

8,621 Views | 77 Replies | Last: 2 yr ago by calumnus
HearstMining
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On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?


Jeff82
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Unless you're simply reloading through recruiting, college basketball, IMHO, is mostly about the coach getting players to add dimensions to their games in the off-season, when they have time for individual skills building. Two things come immediately to mind:

Big man footwork--I've mentioned this before. Both 2K and Lars have poor footwork, in my estimation, which is why they struggle so much, particularly on defense. How you move, learning to block out, these are basic center-forward skills. Kelly has them, which is why, in the tradition of past call players like Harper Kamp and Jamal Boykin, he can play bigger than he is physically. The other guys need to improve in this area.

Shooting--Hyder, Celestine and Brown should all be shooting several hundred jump shots per day, preferably under observation of someone who understands the mechanics of the shot and correct any flaws. They all have slashing ability, but that doesn't help you if you don't have some kind of outside shot that the defense has to respect. This is why we've gotten zoned to death the last several years.
bipolarbear
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Lars must work on strengthening his hands! Don't let the bullies take your ball Lars.
bearister
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"Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both)"

Doesn't simply being a posting member of the BI community provide irrefutable proof that the above assumption about Big C's life is inaccurate?
Cancel my subscription to the Resurrection
Send my credentials to the House of Detention
I got some friends inside
HoopDreams
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Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day







HearstMining said:

On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?



BeachedBear
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HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day




Real good stuff. Completely agree on Kelly, Celestine, Jared & Foreman. For Monty, I think he also needs to add some physical development It's probably just normal growth (he looks really young) - and will come in time. My growth spurt was age 15, my son's was age 20 - go figure.

As for K2 and Lars, in addition to footwork, I think both of them need to address a mental aspect of their game. in particular, the 'speed of the game' - or the fact that they both appear to hesitate and think about their next move. I believe both of them didn't get significant competition at or near this level until later in life than others. In my experience coaching in the past, I found this a lot with late bloomers (i.e kids that were picking up the game in high school vs the other kids that had been playing AAU and CYO since 2nd grade).

What worked well, was to identify and isolate two or three Offensive/Defensive 'moves' and get them to MASTER them before adding a couple more. This boosted confidence (in them and teammates) and helped the flow of team offense and minimize defensive disruptions. Once this clicked in, the coaching staff could add another facet about once a week - even during the season.

This stuff is pretty much coaching 101, but I haven't seen it with these two - and wondering why. Maybe this staff is looking beyond and hoping they catch up (which is not what I would recommend). Or maybe they don't have the time to help with catch-up. Would be curious to hear from 4th Gen or others who have witnessed practices.
bluesaxe
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BeachedBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day




Real good stuff. Completely agree on Kelly, Celestine, Jared & Foreman. For Monty, I think he also needs to add some physical development It's probably just normal growth (he looks really young) - and will come in time. My growth spurt was age 15, my son's was age 20 - go figure.

As for K2 and Lars, in addition to footwork, I think both of them need to address a mental aspect of their game. in particular, the 'speed of the game' - or the fact that they both appear to hesitate and think about their next move. I believe both of them didn't get significant competition at or near this level until later in life than others. In my experience coaching in the past, I found this a lot with late bloomers (i.e kids that were picking up the game in high school vs the other kids that had been playing AAU and CYO since 2nd grade).

What worked well, was to identify and isolate two or three Offensive/Defensive 'moves' and get them to MASTER them before adding a couple more. This boosted confidence (in them and teammates) and helped the flow of team offense and minimize defensive disruptions. Once this clicked in, the coaching staff could add another facet about once a week - even during the season.

This stuff is pretty much coaching 101, but I haven't seen it with these two - and wondering why. Maybe this staff is looking beyond and hoping they catch up (which is not what I would recommend). Or maybe they don't have the time to help with catch-up. Would be curious to hear from 4th Gen or others who have witnessed practices.
There was barely any practice last year and kids couldn't even get into gyms for the most part, so I'm sure developmental work was severely hampered by that. Here's hoping we can get some semblance of normalcy going again and the offseason and preseason can be productive.
calumnus
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bluesaxe said:

BeachedBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day




Real good stuff. Completely agree on Kelly, Celestine, Jared & Foreman. For Monty, I think he also needs to add some physical development It's probably just normal growth (he looks really young) - and will come in time. My growth spurt was age 15, my son's was age 20 - go figure.

As for K2 and Lars, in addition to footwork, I think both of them need to address a mental aspect of their game. in particular, the 'speed of the game' - or the fact that they both appear to hesitate and think about their next move. I believe both of them didn't get significant competition at or near this level until later in life than others. In my experience coaching in the past, I found this a lot with late bloomers (i.e kids that were picking up the game in high school vs the other kids that had been playing AAU and CYO since 2nd grade).

What worked well, was to identify and isolate two or three Offensive/Defensive 'moves' and get them to MASTER them before adding a couple more. This boosted confidence (in them and teammates) and helped the flow of team offense and minimize defensive disruptions. Once this clicked in, the coaching staff could add another facet about once a week - even during the season.

This stuff is pretty much coaching 101, but I haven't seen it with these two - and wondering why. Maybe this staff is looking beyond and hoping they catch up (which is not what I would recommend). Or maybe they don't have the time to help with catch-up. Would be curious to hear from 4th Gen or others who have witnessed practices.
There was barely any practice last year and kids couldn't even get into gyms for the most part, so I'm sure developmental work was severely hampered by that. Here's hoping we can get some semblance of normalcy going again and the offseason and preseason can be productive.


I'm pretty sure Cal played 29 games, including more games in the regular season than any other PAC-12 team.

Are you saying we played more games with less practice? I'm pretty sure the teams that were unable to play due to COVID were the same ones unable to practice. That may account for how teams like UCLA, Oregon and Oregon State improved so much at the end of the season.
SFCityBear
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HearstMining said:

On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?



I'd agree with most of this. I still haven't given up on Lars, as bigs usually take more time to mature and develop. He has a nice traditional right hand hook from 1 to 2 feet out. I would like him to extend his range on that shot, by taking a step with his left foot away from the basket, and shooting the same hook 4-5 feet out. He also needs another shot, like a left hand hook, or maybe a face up 10 foot jumper. Even off the glass, if that is easier for him. And he needs to keep practicing his free throws, because at 7 feet tall, he is still going to keep getting fouled. And his teammates need to feed him passes at least chest high or higher. Young bigs always have trouble with the low pass (see KO or Rooks).

As to assists, Austin was OK, but Charlie Moore was our last good passer. Celestine looks to me like our best passer, and he made some sweet assists last season. However, he's not that fast, and with his ability to shoot 3's and rebound, he might be better used at SF or SG. We need to take advantage of his ability to pass the ball for assists, for sure.
SFCityBear
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Jeff82 said:

Unless you're simply reloading through recruiting, college basketball, IMHO, is mostly about the coach getting players to add dimensions to their games in the off-season, when they have time for individual skills building. Two things come immediately to mind:

Big man footwork--I've mentioned this before. Both 2K and Lars have poor footwork, in my estimation, which is why they struggle so much, particularly on defense. How you move, learning to block out, these are basic center-forward skills. Kelly has them, which is why, in the tradition of past call players like Harper Kamp and Jamal Boykin, he can play bigger than he is physically. The other guys need to improve in this area.

Shooting--Hyder, Celestine and Brown should all be shooting several hundred jump shots per day, preferably under observation of someone who understands the mechanics of the shot and correct any flaws. They all have slashing ability, but that doesn't help you if you don't have some kind of outside shot that the defense has to respect. This is why we've gotten zoned to death the last several years.
I don't disagree with much of anything here, but why is Celestine lumped in with Brown and Hyder, when asking players to shoot 100 shots a day? I mean they all should, but Celestine led the team in 3-point shooting last season, at .414 percentage, way ahead of all the others. Cal would have won several more games if Celestine had been healthy enough to shoot the number of threes Betley and Foreman were allowed to shoot under Fox, IMO. And I don't see Celestine as a slasher. He rarely can get to the rim and score. He needs to learn that.

Foreman can shoot threes, but he is so short that he needs to get some good screens, or he needs to work a lot on creating his own three point openings, which he is not good at. His drives are an adventure. Brown shot a decent percentage, but I'd have him shoot more threes, because I don't yet trust his unorthodox form. If he keeps making them around 40%, fine. If not, I'd have him shoot your 100 shots a day. Hyder needs to practice threes, because has no consistency. If he makes one, the next one is liable to be an airball. He needs a mid-range shot.
SFCityBear
SFCityBear
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HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day







HearstMining said:

On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?




Mostly all good points. Why would you want Kelly shooting threes? If you throw out his first year where he had only 3 attempts, and last year, where he had none, he has shot threes at only 25%. Kelly is not even a good free throw shooter yet. I don't mind him shooting a 10-15 footer, but it will take him away from the basket, and he is the best rebounder in the rotation so that weakens our rebounding. And if he doesn't make a good percentage away from the basket, no one will come out to guard him, will they? Then you are playing 4 on 5.

As for Foreman, his percentage dropped when he came to Cal. I think he is too short and not skilled enough to score much on the drive. What about having him shoot 12 footers off the glass from behind a double screen, like Jorge, Cobbs, and Crabbe used to do? Maybe a play like that is too complicated for Fox, I don't know, but I think such a play might be made to order for Foreman.
SFCityBear
HoopDreams
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SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day







HearstMining said:

On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?




Mostly all good points. Why would you want Kelly shooting threes? If you throw out his first year where he had only 3 attempts, and last year, where he had none, he has shot threes at only 25%. Kelly is not even a good free throw shooter yet. I don't mind him shooting a 10-15 footer, but it will take him away from the basket, and he is the best rebounder in the rotation so that weakens our rebounding. And if he doesn't make a good percentage away from the basket, no one will come out to guard him, will they? Then you are playing 4 on 5.

As for Foreman, his percentage dropped when he came to Cal. I think he is too short and not skilled enough to score much on the drive. What about having him shoot 12 footers off the glass from behind a double screen, like Jorge, Cobbs, and Crabbe used to do? Maybe a play like that is too complicated for Fox, I don't know, but I think such a play might be made to order for Foreman.
fair point, but I don't know where are scoring will come from, and we lost 2 three point shooters, and gained zero.

If I can learn a floater, Foreman can learn a footer

puget sound cal fan
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...and who might teach these skills to the bigs?
SFCityBear
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HoopDreams said:

SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day







HearstMining said:

On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?




Mostly all good points. Why would you want Kelly shooting threes? If you throw out his first year where he had only 3 attempts, and last year, where he had none, he has shot threes at only 25%. Kelly is not even a good free throw shooter yet. I don't mind him shooting a 10-15 footer, but it will take him away from the basket, and he is the best rebounder in the rotation so that weakens our rebounding. And if he doesn't make a good percentage away from the basket, no one will come out to guard him, will they? Then you are playing 4 on 5.

As for Foreman, his percentage dropped when he came to Cal. I think he is too short and not skilled enough to score much on the drive. What about having him shoot 12 footers off the glass from behind a double screen, like Jorge, Cobbs, and Crabbe used to do? Maybe a play like that is too complicated for Fox, I don't know, but I think such a play might be made to order for Foreman.
fair point, but I don't know where are scoring will come from, and we lost 2 three point shooters, and gained zero.

If I can learn a floater, Foreman can learn a footer


You are right about the scoring. I think Fox will have to find a way to get the team to play more efficiently with better shot selection. As for three point shooting, last season some players took too many three point attempts, and turned out to be poor or below average shooters. I am thinking of Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman. Some players who shot threes at a higher percentage, but took very few attempts. These are Celestine and Brown. The obvious strategy would be for Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman to limit their three point attempts, cut them down, and have Celestine and Brown (our best returning three-point shooters, percentage-wise) increase their number of attempts. Foreman can make threes, but he needs to be more selective, and take only open ones. Celestine has a shooting percentage double that of Hyder and Kuany, so he should be shooting more threes than either of them, until they prove they can make them. Celestine's attempts will go up naturally, because he will be a starter. Last season, he averaged only 12 minutes. Brown has a very unorthodox stroke, but if he keeps making them at a .387 clip, he needs to increase his attempts. Anticevich shoots threes well enough, but he could increase his attempts by one or two per game.

The other point is we need better scoring from the mid-range and inside, to where we don't need to fill the air with three point shots. This means more playmaking, and I don't know if Fox or the team is up to the task. I think Grant needs to take the 12-15 footer, and he needs to develop an aggressive and effective drive. He doesn't take the ball to the basket. We need to feature Kelly in deep more, and Lars and Thorpe will need to develop some scoring ability. Shepherd seems to be able to score without making threes. We don't know what Bowser can do. They are listing Roberson as a Shooting Guard, so presumably he can shoot a bit. Alajiki's tape showed an ability to do lots of things, so he may be able to add some scoring. Don't know about Anyanwu. but I'd guess he would be a better scorer inside than Lars, Thorpe, and maybe Kuany.

As for Kuany, and for everyone really, this will be the first full summer that Fox and his staff have had to work the players hard in between seasons. And Fox has said that is the most important time for coaches to teach and give players the work to improve. For most players, the 3rd and 4th year is when players make a jump in their progress, but that is usually three full summers of work, and for many of these players it will be their first and only full season of summer work with the team. I hope Fox was right, and I hope he has some success this summer and this season, and can get the boo-birds off his back for a while. On the minus side, shooting is a tough thing to teach. Only a few players can learn to shoot when they are adults or almost adults. Good shooters are usually born not made. That is why the rest of the game, the playmaking, the defense, the rebounding is so important when you don't have great shooters. Open shots make for more scoring.
SFCityBear
calumnus
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SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day







HearstMining said:

On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?




Mostly all good points. Why would you want Kelly shooting threes? If you throw out his first year where he had only 3 attempts, and last year, where he had none, he has shot threes at only 25%. Kelly is not even a good free throw shooter yet. I don't mind him shooting a 10-15 footer, but it will take him away from the basket, and he is the best rebounder in the rotation so that weakens our rebounding. And if he doesn't make a good percentage away from the basket, no one will come out to guard him, will they? Then you are playing 4 on 5.

As for Foreman, his percentage dropped when he came to Cal. I think he is too short and not skilled enough to score much on the drive. What about having him shoot 12 footers off the glass from behind a double screen, like Jorge, Cobbs, and Crabbe used to do? Maybe a play like that is too complicated for Fox, I don't know, but I think such a play might be made to order for Foreman.
fair point, but I don't know where are scoring will come from, and we lost 2 three point shooters, and gained zero.

If I can learn a floater, Foreman can learn a footer


You are right about the scoring. I think Fox will have to find a way to get the team to play more efficiently with better shot selection. As for three point shooting, last season some players took too many three point attempts, and turned out to be poor or below average shooters. I am thinking of Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman. Some players who shot threes at a higher percentage, but took very few attempts. These are Celestine and Brown. The obvious strategy would be for Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman to limit their three point attempts, cut them down, and have Celestine and Brown (our best returning three-point shooters, percentage-wise) increase their number of attempts. Foreman can make threes, but he needs to be more selective, and take only open ones. Celestine has a shooting percentage double that of Hyder and Kuany, so he should be shooting more threes than either of them, until they prove they can make them. Celestine's attempts will go up naturally, because he will be a starter. Last season, he averaged only 12 minutes. Brown has a very unorthodox stroke, but if he keeps making them at a .387 clip, he needs to increase his attempts. Anticevich shoots threes well enough, but he could increase his attempts by one or two per game.

The other point is we need better scoring from the mid-range and inside, to where we don't need to fill the air with three point shots. This means more playmaking, and I don't know if Fox or the team is up to the task. I think Grant needs to take the 12-15 footer, and he needs to develop an aggressive and effective drive. He doesn't take the ball to the basket. We need to feature Kelly in deep more, and Lars and Thorpe will need to develop some scoring ability. Shepherd seems to be able to score without making threes. We don't know what Bowser can do. They are listing Roberson as a Shooting Guard, so presumably he can shoot a bit. Alajiki's tape showed an ability to do lots of things, so he may be able to add some scoring. Don't know about Anyanwu. but I'd guess he would be a better scorer inside than Lars, Thorpe, and maybe Kuany.

As for Kuany, and for everyone really, this will be the first full summer that Fox and his staff have had to work the players hard in between seasons. And Fox has said that is the most important time for coaches to teach and give players the work to improve. For most players, the 3rd and 4th year is when players make a jump in their progress, but that is usually three full summers of work, and for many of these players it will be their first and only full season of summer work with the team. I hope Fox was right, and I hope he has some success this summer and this season, and can get the boo-birds off his back for a while. On the minus side, shooting is a tough thing to teach. Only a few players can learn to shoot when they are adults or almost adults. Good shooters are usually born not made. That is why the rest of the game, the playmaking, the defense, the rebounding is so important when you don't have great shooters. Open shots make for more scoring.


Kuany was 3 of 15 from three which is bad, but the year before he was 5 of 14 which is pretty good. The bottom line is 15 shots over 29 games is not a lot of shots. Even good shooters like to get in rhythm, so it is tough to conclude he is good or bad. Not sure he will play more as the guys that played ahead of him are all back, plus we add Anywanu. I'm not sure Fox would consider Kuany for the 3, he tends to follow convention.

The vast number of threes taken last year were by Betley and Bradley, who are of course gone. Someone will have to shoot in their place. Celestine is obvious. Who else remains a mystery, but this year I'd like to see the guys that are making a good percentage take more shots and the guys who aren't stop shooting so much.

HoopDreams
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Calumnus And SF

Appreciate the actual discussion on basketball!

Shooting can be improved but agree we are unlikely to have any player suddenly transform to be Curry

But players can learn new shots, counters, and improve ball handling

With daily skills practice it's amazing how fast you can learn/improve a ball handling move. For example, different ways to get a step back mid-range jumper

I've talked a ton about hesi's and still see it as one of the single best way to increase a players offensive effectiveness, including when the defender is more athletic then you are

Big C
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calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day







HearstMining said:

On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?




Mostly all good points. Why would you want Kelly shooting threes? If you throw out his first year where he had only 3 attempts, and last year, where he had none, he has shot threes at only 25%. Kelly is not even a good free throw shooter yet. I don't mind him shooting a 10-15 footer, but it will take him away from the basket, and he is the best rebounder in the rotation so that weakens our rebounding. And if he doesn't make a good percentage away from the basket, no one will come out to guard him, will they? Then you are playing 4 on 5.

As for Foreman, his percentage dropped when he came to Cal. I think he is too short and not skilled enough to score much on the drive. What about having him shoot 12 footers off the glass from behind a double screen, like Jorge, Cobbs, and Crabbe used to do? Maybe a play like that is too complicated for Fox, I don't know, but I think such a play might be made to order for Foreman.
fair point, but I don't know where are scoring will come from, and we lost 2 three point shooters, and gained zero.

If I can learn a floater, Foreman can learn a footer


You are right about the scoring. I think Fox will have to find a way to get the team to play more efficiently with better shot selection. As for three point shooting, last season some players took too many three point attempts, and turned out to be poor or below average shooters. I am thinking of Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman. Some players who shot threes at a higher percentage, but took very few attempts. These are Celestine and Brown. The obvious strategy would be for Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman to limit their three point attempts, cut them down, and have Celestine and Brown (our best returning three-point shooters, percentage-wise) increase their number of attempts. Foreman can make threes, but he needs to be more selective, and take only open ones. Celestine has a shooting percentage double that of Hyder and Kuany, so he should be shooting more threes than either of them, until they prove they can make them. Celestine's attempts will go up naturally, because he will be a starter. Last season, he averaged only 12 minutes. Brown has a very unorthodox stroke, but if he keeps making them at a .387 clip, he needs to increase his attempts. Anticevich shoots threes well enough, but he could increase his attempts by one or two per game.

The other point is we need better scoring from the mid-range and inside, to where we don't need to fill the air with three point shots. This means more playmaking, and I don't know if Fox or the team is up to the task. I think Grant needs to take the 12-15 footer, and he needs to develop an aggressive and effective drive. He doesn't take the ball to the basket. We need to feature Kelly in deep more, and Lars and Thorpe will need to develop some scoring ability. Shepherd seems to be able to score without making threes. We don't know what Bowser can do. They are listing Roberson as a Shooting Guard, so presumably he can shoot a bit. Alajiki's tape showed an ability to do lots of things, so he may be able to add some scoring. Don't know about Anyanwu. but I'd guess he would be a better scorer inside than Lars, Thorpe, and maybe Kuany.

As for Kuany, and for everyone really, this will be the first full summer that Fox and his staff have had to work the players hard in between seasons. And Fox has said that is the most important time for coaches to teach and give players the work to improve. For most players, the 3rd and 4th year is when players make a jump in their progress, but that is usually three full summers of work, and for many of these players it will be their first and only full season of summer work with the team. I hope Fox was right, and I hope he has some success this summer and this season, and can get the boo-birds off his back for a while. On the minus side, shooting is a tough thing to teach. Only a few players can learn to shoot when they are adults or almost adults. Good shooters are usually born not made. That is why the rest of the game, the playmaking, the defense, the rebounding is so important when you don't have great shooters. Open shots make for more scoring.


Kuany was 3 of 15 from three which is bad, but the year before he was 5 of 14 which is pretty good. The bottom line is 15 shots over 29 games is not a lot of shots. Even good shooters like to get in rhythm, so it is tough to conclude he is good or bad. Not sure he will play more as the guys that played ahead of him are all back, plus we add Anywanu. I'm not sure Fox would consider Kuany for the 3, he tends to follow convention.

The vast number of threes taken last year were by Betley and Bradley, who are of course gone. Someone will have to shoot in their place. Celestine is obvious. Who else remains a mystery, but I'd like to see the guys that are making a good percentage take more shots.



I hear Foreman has volunteered to fill the void and take all of the 3-pointers that Betley and Bradley took last year.
stu
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I don't remember who said this or even the exact wording: If you want to get better either you need to get better players or the players you have need to get better.

I don't see much success with the former so I suppose we're depending on the latter. I think Anticevich, Foreman, and Kelly have enough college experience they're unlikely to improve dramatically in a short time. I'm hoping that over the summer our younger guys can learn some new tricks and get more comfortable playing together.
calumnus
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stu said:

I don't remember who said this or even the exact wording: If you want to get better either you need to get better players or the players you have need to get better.

I don't see much success with the former so I suppose we're depending on the latter. I think Anticevich, Foreman, and Kelly have enough college experience they're unlikely to improve dramatically in a short time. I'm hoping that over the summer our younger guys can learn some new tricks and get more comfortable playing together.



A third option is better strategy from the coach to maximize the results from the players you have and the skills they possess.
SFCityBear
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calumnus said:

stu said:

I don't remember who said this or even the exact wording: If you want to get better either you need to get better players or the players you have need to get better.

I don't see much success with the former so I suppose we're depending on the latter. I think Anticevich, Foreman, and Kelly have enough college experience they're unlikely to improve dramatically in a short time. I'm hoping that over the summer our younger guys can learn some new tricks and get more comfortable playing together.



A third option is better strategy from the coach to maximize the results from the players you have and the skills they possess.

Cal does not have the luxury to select an option. They must use all three strategies to measurably improve.
SFCityBear
oskidunker
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Isn't the grad transfer. A three shooter?
calumnus
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oskidunker said:

Isn't the grad transfer. A three shooter?


Career .307 from 3. Last year he was .294

So "No." That is why I said he seems to replicate the skills of guys already on the team. I can't see why you would play him WITH Brown. Maybe instead of, starting him at PG, but that does not greatly improve the team.
Big C
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calumnus said:

oskidunker said:

Isn't the grad transfer. A three shooter?


Career .307 from 3. Last year he was .294

So "No." That is why I said he seems to replicate the skills of guys already on the team. I can't see why you would play him WITH Brown. Maybe instead of, starting him at PG, but that does not greatly improve the team.

One reason to play Shepherd with Brown would be that there's nobody else. It's not like there are other shooters on the roster, except maybe Celestine (who might already be starting at the other wing spot).
calumnus
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Big C said:

calumnus said:

oskidunker said:

Isn't the grad transfer. A three shooter?


Career .307 from 3. Last year he was .294

So "No." That is why I said he seems to replicate the skills of guys already on the team. I can't see why you would play him WITH Brown. Maybe instead of, starting him at PG, but that does not greatly improve the team.

One reason to play Shepherd with Brown would be that there's nobody else. It's not like there are other shooters on the roster, except maybe Celestine (who might already be starting at the other wing spot).


I have Celestine penciled in as a starter at a 2 or 3.

The issue is Shepard is a PG who is a scorer, but not a three point shooter. If he is on the floor he can play PG, so not sure Brown would add much, better to add another scorer who is also a three point shooter.
ClayK
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Since all programs spend the offseason working with players, and since player development is well understood, it seems unlikely Cal (or any program) could gain significant advantages over other schools in improvement.

It's possible, and some staffs will be better at player development than others, but the difference in improvement on one team is not going to be that much greater than the difference in improvement on another team -- unless there is more untapped potential in one group.

And given the huge emphasis on trainers, etc., for D-1 signees as teens, it just seems unlikely to me that any staff will wave a magic wand and gain 10% more improvement than another program. I would agree that a good training staff can get players to improve more, but I don't think it would be enough to translate into more than one or two extra wins.
Big C
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calumnus said:

Big C said:

calumnus said:

oskidunker said:

Isn't the grad transfer. A three shooter?


Career .307 from 3. Last year he was .294

So "No." That is why I said he seems to replicate the skills of guys already on the team. I can't see why you would play him WITH Brown. Maybe instead of, starting him at PG, but that does not greatly improve the team.

One reason to play Shepherd with Brown would be that there's nobody else. It's not like there are other shooters on the roster, except maybe Celestine (who might already be starting at the other wing spot).


I have Celestine penciled in as a starter at a 2 or 3.

The issue is Shepard is a PG who is a scorer, but not a three point shooter. If he is on the floor he can play PG, so not sure Brown would add much, better to add another scorer who is also a three point shooter.

Yeah, but who would that be? My point is that we have a paucity of backcourt shooters/scorers. Foreman maybe? He brings other liabilities...
SFCityBear
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calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day







HearstMining said:

On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?




Mostly all good points. Why would you want Kelly shooting threes? If you throw out his first year where he had only 3 attempts, and last year, where he had none, he has shot threes at only 25%. Kelly is not even a good free throw shooter yet. I don't mind him shooting a 10-15 footer, but it will take him away from the basket, and he is the best rebounder in the rotation so that weakens our rebounding. And if he doesn't make a good percentage away from the basket, no one will come out to guard him, will they? Then you are playing 4 on 5.

As for Foreman, his percentage dropped when he came to Cal. I think he is too short and not skilled enough to score much on the drive. What about having him shoot 12 footers off the glass from behind a double screen, like Jorge, Cobbs, and Crabbe used to do? Maybe a play like that is too complicated for Fox, I don't know, but I think such a play might be made to order for Foreman.
fair point, but I don't know where are scoring will come from, and we lost 2 three point shooters, and gained zero.

If I can learn a floater, Foreman can learn a footer


You are right about the scoring. I think Fox will have to find a way to get the team to play more efficiently with better shot selection. As for three point shooting, last season some players took too many three point attempts, and turned out to be poor or below average shooters. I am thinking of Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman. Some players who shot threes at a higher percentage, but took very few attempts. These are Celestine and Brown. The obvious strategy would be for Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman to limit their three point attempts, cut them down, and have Celestine and Brown (our best returning three-point shooters, percentage-wise) increase their number of attempts. Foreman can make threes, but he needs to be more selective, and take only open ones. Celestine has a shooting percentage double that of Hyder and Kuany, so he should be shooting more threes than either of them, until they prove they can make them. Celestine's attempts will go up naturally, because he will be a starter. Last season, he averaged only 12 minutes. Brown has a very unorthodox stroke, but if he keeps making them at a .387 clip, he needs to increase his attempts. Anticevich shoots threes well enough, but he could increase his attempts by one or two per game.

The other point is we need better scoring from the mid-range and inside, to where we don't need to fill the air with three point shots. This means more playmaking, and I don't know if Fox or the team is up to the task. I think Grant needs to take the 12-15 footer, and he needs to develop an aggressive and effective drive. He doesn't take the ball to the basket. We need to feature Kelly in deep more, and Lars and Thorpe will need to develop some scoring ability. Shepherd seems to be able to score without making threes. We don't know what Bowser can do. They are listing Roberson as a Shooting Guard, so presumably he can shoot a bit. Alajiki's tape showed an ability to do lots of things, so he may be able to add some scoring. Don't know about Anyanwu. but I'd guess he would be a better scorer inside than Lars, Thorpe, and maybe Kuany.

As for Kuany, and for everyone really, this will be the first full summer that Fox and his staff have had to work the players hard in between seasons. And Fox has said that is the most important time for coaches to teach and give players the work to improve. For most players, the 3rd and 4th year is when players make a jump in their progress, but that is usually three full summers of work, and for many of these players it will be their first and only full season of summer work with the team. I hope Fox was right, and I hope he has some success this summer and this season, and can get the boo-birds off his back for a while. On the minus side, shooting is a tough thing to teach. Only a few players can learn to shoot when they are adults or almost adults. Good shooters are usually born not made. That is why the rest of the game, the playmaking, the defense, the rebounding is so important when you don't have great shooters. Open shots make for more scoring.


Kuany was 3 of 15 from three which is bad, but the year before he was 5 of 14 which is pretty good. The bottom line is 15 shots over 29 games is not a lot of shots. Even good shooters like to get in rhythm, so it is tough to conclude he is good or bad. Not sure he will play more as the guys that played ahead of him are all back, plus we add Anywanu. I'm not sure Fox would consider Kuany for the 3, he tends to follow convention.

The vast number of threes taken last year were by Betley and Bradley, who are of course gone. Someone will have to shoot in their place. Celestine is obvious. Who else remains a mystery, but this year I'd like to see the guys that are making a good percentage take more shots and the guys who aren't stop shooting so much.


I don't follow the logic. You say that Kuany does not have much of a sample with only 29 three point attempts in his career, and that is to small to judge whether he can shoot well enough. But then you say that it is obvious that Celestine can shoot threes well enough, but he has had the same career sample size as Kuany, 29 attempts. Celestine could just as easily come out this season and shoot .200, so we really don't know for sure about either player's ability yet. And it is true that shooters like to get in rhythm, but it is also true that good shooters are the ones who are ALLOWED to get in rhythm. If you are key starter playing 35 minutes like Bradley, you will get 6-9 attempts maybe, and will have a good chance to get in rhythm. Part-time players like Kuany, off the bench, will come in cold and if they miss one or two threes, they will usually get pulled from the game, unless they are needed more for other purposes.

I came off the bench most of my high school career. I was not a good athlete. I realized that if I got into a game, I would need to do something good or special to warrant the coach leaving me in the game. I could do one thing well, and that was shooting long range bombs. In those days, nobody guarded anyone beyond the perimeter, because even at 30 feet, it was still only a two-point shot. I practiced thousands of those shots. I was determined to make my first shot count, and most of the time I did, and I kept getting more playing time, until I was made a starter. I was scoring enough, that I started getting fouled a lot, so I also worked hard to make my free throws, and I shot those at over 90%. I rarely had no more than one or two FTAs in a game, so no chance to get in rhythm. What I am saying is that it is not as much a matter of getting in rhythm, it is more a matter of thousands of practice shots, leading to the confidence that you can make that first shot, and if you can make that first one, you can make more of them. For me it was desperation, because if I didn't make that first shot, I might not see the court again for days or weeks.

I like Celestine and Kuany shooting the three. Celestine, however, is a complete basketball player with lots of court experience, while Kuany is still a raw talent learning the game. As I remember, Kuany seemed to take most of his attempts from the corners. That is a more difficult shot than taking it from top of the key and left or right side. In the corner you need better vision or better concentration, because you don't have the backboard in your field of view. There may be fans on the far side moving in your line of sight to distract you. It is still a very makeable shot, but needs more game experience to perfect it.

Are you saying that Anyanwu is a three point shooter? If so, he might help, but bear in mind he won't be making as many buckets at Cal as he did in high school. He averaged 16 points last season. Jaylen Brown averaged 28 in high school, 14 at Cal. Ivan Rabb, 24 in high school, 12 at Cal. The D1 game is faster, played against better defenders, and better athletes than they played against in high school.

When you say Betley and Bradley "took the vast number of threes" you keep leaving Foreman out of the conversation. On a per 40 minute basis, Foreman was Cal's Champion Chucker, with 9.3 three point attempts, followed by Betley at 8.0 and Bradley way behind at 6.6. The only reason Betley had more total attempts than Foreman was that he played 200 more minutes than Foreman. Bradley played only 65 more minutes than Foreman.




SFCityBear
4thGenCal
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SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

Thanks for the post. Adding a some points:

Agree Kelly needs to be ALLOWED to shoot the 15 footer AND the three. He obviously doesn't have the green light for those shots but he's capable and we need his offense

Brown needs to slow down on offense, by improving his ball handling, and more Hesitation moves. Right now he tries to use his quickness to drive, but he doesn't finish well over rim protectors and ends up with no where to go

Lars needs to strengthen his low body so he can move better. His upside will mainly be his defense and rebounding. We should not try to run the offense through him.

Celestine and Jared need to get healthy

Monty needs to get healthy and be a shooter scorer and defender. Maybe too much to ask but he showed flashes in limited minutes

Foreman is too one dimensional as a 3 point specialist, but his percentages we too low for the number of shots he took. We will have fewer shooters this year, but the number of shots should drop anyway. He needs to be able to score off the bounce to expand too be less one dimensional but given his size he needs to practice his tear drop a hundred shots a day







HearstMining said:

On the Playing Out the String thread, Big C talked about finding some hope and meaning (implicitly, for Cal basketball - I'm sure his life in general is full of both) and I immediately started thinking about adding specific hopes but that wandered from the topic, so I'm starting this new thread. I'm not thinking about the larger picture (recruiting, coaching direction, institutional support, etc), that's too depressing. I'm thinking about players and maybe tactics for the upcoming season. Several Many of you are better analysts than I, so what are your thoughts?

Andre Kelly - Along with improved endurance, I want to see some muscle definition on this guy! The weight room and maybe some plyometrics to improve his vertical and quickness. His jump hook works against guys who are 6'-9" or less, maybe he needs a short turnaround shot to his right as a complement. I think he could step out and hit a 12-15ft jumper, too.

Joel Brown - Free-throw form needs a complete rebuild. Develop a floater to use once he's in the key. Play better defense with his body, he's quick enough to do it.

Lars T - As with Kelly, improve quickness. Maybe more focus on offensive rebounding and less on getting the ball on the block and shooting because he clearly has no idea what to do when he gets that pass down low.

Jalen Celestine - Like the Loch Ness Monster, he appears long enough to get people intrigued then ZIP - he submerges. Based on what we've seen, if he gets stronger, maybe the rest takes care of itself.

Jarred Hyder - He didn't appear to be mentally or physically ready to play PAC12 basketball, so improved mental focus and a stronger upper body should be on his to-do list. Needs to become a more useful passer - it seemed like he either passed as a bail-out when he couldn't get a shot off or just a perimeter pass to another guard that initiated nothing. The team needs him to improve his outside shot (and shot selection) but I don't know if his current form really works. Maybe it can - us old f@rts remember Jamal Wilkes' unorthodox jumper!

Overall - SFCity, if he reads this, will immediately think, "Wait! You didn't mention assists!" Fair enough - I think there will be more assists if the players have additional options on offense. Defenders overplayed the pass like crazy and yet nobody ever went backdoor. Likewise, I hardly saw any off-ball or weak-side screens. Lots of poorly executed ball screens, though!

Defensively, I thought Cal generally played a lousy zone, which should improve with a full practice schedule. I know Cal's 3pt defense was abysmal, was it a problem with scheme or execution?




Mostly all good points. Why would you want Kelly shooting threes? If you throw out his first year where he had only 3 attempts, and last year, where he had none, he has shot threes at only 25%. Kelly is not even a good free throw shooter yet. I don't mind him shooting a 10-15 footer, but it will take him away from the basket, and he is the best rebounder in the rotation so that weakens our rebounding. And if he doesn't make a good percentage away from the basket, no one will come out to guard him, will they? Then you are playing 4 on 5.

As for Foreman, his percentage dropped when he came to Cal. I think he is too short and not skilled enough to score much on the drive. What about having him shoot 12 footers off the glass from behind a double screen, like Jorge, Cobbs, and Crabbe used to do? Maybe a play like that is too complicated for Fox, I don't know, but I think such a play might be made to order for Foreman.
fair point, but I don't know where are scoring will come from, and we lost 2 three point shooters, and gained zero.

If I can learn a floater, Foreman can learn a footer


You are right about the scoring. I think Fox will have to find a way to get the team to play more efficiently with better shot selection. As for three point shooting, last season some players took too many three point attempts, and turned out to be poor or below average shooters. I am thinking of Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman. Some players who shot threes at a higher percentage, but took very few attempts. These are Celestine and Brown. The obvious strategy would be for Kuany, Hyder, and Foreman to limit their three point attempts, cut them down, and have Celestine and Brown (our best returning three-point shooters, percentage-wise) increase their number of attempts. Foreman can make threes, but he needs to be more selective, and take only open ones. Celestine has a shooting percentage double that of Hyder and Kuany, so he should be shooting more threes than either of them, until they prove they can make them. Celestine's attempts will go up naturally, because he will be a starter. Last season, he averaged only 12 minutes. Brown has a very unorthodox stroke, but if he keeps making them at a .387 clip, he needs to increase his attempts. Anticevich shoots threes well enough, but he could increase his attempts by one or two per game.

The other point is we need better scoring from the mid-range and inside, to where we don't need to fill the air with three point shots. This means more playmaking, and I don't know if Fox or the team is up to the task. I think Grant needs to take the 12-15 footer, and he needs to develop an aggressive and effective drive. He doesn't take the ball to the basket. We need to feature Kelly in deep more, and Lars and Thorpe will need to develop some scoring ability. Shepherd seems to be able to score without making threes. We don't know what Bowser can do. They are listing Roberson as a Shooting Guard, so presumably he can shoot a bit. Alajiki's tape showed an ability to do lots of things, so he may be able to add some scoring. Don't know about Anyanwu. but I'd guess he would be a better scorer inside than Lars, Thorpe, and maybe Kuany.

As for Kuany, and for everyone really, this will be the first full summer that Fox and his staff have had to work the players hard in between seasons. And Fox has said that is the most important time for coaches to teach and give players the work to improve. For most players, the 3rd and 4th year is when players make a jump in their progress, but that is usually three full summers of work, and for many of these players it will be their first and only full season of summer work with the team. I hope Fox was right, and I hope he has some success this summer and this season, and can get the boo-birds off his back for a while. On the minus side, shooting is a tough thing to teach. Only a few players can learn to shoot when they are adults or almost adults. Good shooters are usually born not made. That is why the rest of the game, the playmaking, the defense, the rebounding is so important when you don't have great shooters. Open shots make for more scoring.


Kuany was 3 of 15 from three which is bad, but the year before he was 5 of 14 which is pretty good. The bottom line is 15 shots over 29 games is not a lot of shots. Even good shooters like to get in rhythm, so it is tough to conclude he is good or bad. Not sure he will play more as the guys that played ahead of him are all back, plus we add Anywanu. I'm not sure Fox would consider Kuany for the 3, he tends to follow convention.

The vast number of threes taken last year were by Betley and Bradley, who are of course gone. Someone will have to shoot in their place. Celestine is obvious. Who else remains a mystery, but this year I'd like to see the guys that are making a good percentage take more shots and the guys who aren't stop shooting so much.


I don't follow the logic. You say that Kuany does not have much of a sample with only 29 three point attempts in his career, and that is to small to judge whether he can shoot well enough. But then you say that it is obvious that Celestine can shoot threes well enough, but he has had the same career sample size as Kuany, 29 attempts. Celestine could just as easily come out this season and shoot .200, so we really don't know for sure about either player's ability yet. And it is true that shooters like to get in rhythm, but it is also true that good shooters are the ones who are ALLOWED to get in rhythm. If you are key starter playing 35 minutes like Bradley, you will get 6-9 attempts maybe, and will have a good chance to get in rhythm. Part-time players like Kuany, off the bench, will come in cold and if they miss one or two threes, they will usually get pulled from the game, unless they are needed more for other purposes.

I came off the bench most of my high school career. I was not a good athlete. I realized that if I got into a game, I would need to do something good or special to warrant the coach leaving me in the game. I could do one thing well, and that was shooting long range bombs. In those days, nobody guarded anyone beyond the perimeter, because even at 30 feet, it was still only a two-point shot. I practiced thousands of those shots. I was determined to make my first shot count, and most of the time I did, and I kept getting more playing time, until I was made a starter. I was scoring enough, that I started getting fouled a lot, so I also worked hard to make my free throws, and I shot those at over 90%. I rarely had no more than one or two FTAs in a game, so no chance to get in rhythm. What I am saying is that it is not as much a matter of getting in rhythm, it is more a matter of thousands of practice shots, leading to the confidence that you can make that first shot, and if you can make that first one, you can make more of them. For me it was desperation, because if I didn't make that first shot, I might not see the court again for days or weeks.

I like Celestine and Kuany shooting the three. Celestine, however, is a complete basketball player with lots of court experience, while Kuany is still a raw talent learning the game. As I remember, Kuany seemed to take most of his attempts from the corners. That is a more difficult shot than taking it from top of the key and left or right side. In the corner you need better vision or better concentration, because you don't have the backboard in your field of view. There may be fans on the far side moving in your line of sight to distract you. It is still a very makeable shot, but needs more game experience to perfect it.

Are you saying that Anyanwu is a three point shooter? If so, he might help, but bear in mind he won't be making as many buckets at Cal as he did in high school. He averaged 16 points last season. Jaylen Brown averaged 28 in high school, 14 at Cal. Ivan Rabb, 24 in high school, 12 at Cal. The D1 game is faster, played against better defenders, and better athletes than they played against in high school.

When you say Betley and Bradley "took the vast number of threes" you keep leaving Foreman out of the conversation. On a per 40 minute basis, Foreman was Cal's Champion Chucker, with 9.3 three point attempts, followed by Betley at 8.0 and Bradley way behind at 6.6. The only reason Betley had more total attempts than Foreman was that he played 200 more minutes than Foreman. Bradley played only 65 more minutes than Foreman.





Celestine provided he will be fully recovered from essentially a dislocated kneecap, will likely be the team's best 3 point shooter. Its a pure shot that has nice release, back spin and appropriate arc. Definitely needs to be fully healed to be able to finish at the rim once defenders crowd him. Have not seen Shepard yet, though reports from the players is that he is very good and can be versatile amongst the shooting guard, or back up the point. Again its been mostly individual skill work with limited scrimmaging.
calumnus
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Big C said:

calumnus said:

Big C said:

calumnus said:

oskidunker said:

Isn't the grad transfer. A three shooter?


Career .307 from 3. Last year he was .294

So "No." That is why I said he seems to replicate the skills of guys already on the team. I can't see why you would play him WITH Brown. Maybe instead of, starting him at PG, but that does not greatly improve the team.

One reason to play Shepherd with Brown would be that there's nobody else. It's not like there are other shooters on the roster, except maybe Celestine (who might already be starting at the other wing spot).


I have Celestine penciled in as a starter at a 2 or 3.

The issue is Shepard is a PG who is a scorer, but not a three point shooter. If he is on the floor he can play PG, so not sure Brown would add much, better to add another scorer who is also a three point shooter.

Yeah, but who would that be? My point is that we have a paucity of backcourt shooters/scorers. Foreman maybe? He brings other liabilities...


If we start Shepard and Celestine in the backcourt, Brown would be the backup PG.

We would then have an opening at the 2/3. The candidates are;
Foreman
Hyder
Klonaras
Bowser
Kuany
Roberson
Alajiki
Anywanu
Welle

I cannot say who the starter should be, id let performance determine that, but given the other talents, including Shepard as a slasher/scorer, I'd look for the guy that best fills the role of "3 and D" ie able to hit a high percentage from 3 and defend opposition small forwards.
oskidunker
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Kuany should start. We need some height in there.
4thGenCal
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oskidunker said:

Kuany should start. We need some height in there.
There will be improved depth albeit still not to the skill level of nearly every other conf team. Assuming health and once conf play begins, my guess is Brown (pt too athletic, and best defensive player too not start), Shepard at the shooting guard, Celestine wing, Grant A - Power/stretch forward and Kelly at Post. Kuany will get reps, but still raw and defensively needs to be tougher and be in the right place quicker. Lars, Hyder (assuming his foot stress fracture heals), DJ, Foreman, rounding out the 2nd team - wild card is how quick Marshalis R adapts to the speed and various responsibilities - athletic and will be impactful at some point, but likely one year away (needs to get stronger) and similar observations with Bowser.
HoopDreams
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I'm pretty worried about this team, especially with two key players coming off injuries

hopefully one or two players surprise, and everyone gets better with a regular offseason and a year's improvement in strength and experience
SFCityBear
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4thGenCal said:

oskidunker said:

Kuany should start. We need some height in there.
There will be improved depth albeit still not to the skill level of nearly every other conf team. Assuming health and once conf play begins, my guess is Brown (pt too athletic, and best defensive player too not start), Shepard at the shooting guard, Celestine wing, Grant A - Power/stretch forward and Kelly at Post. Kuany will get reps, but still raw and defensively needs to be tougher and be in the right place quicker. Lars, Hyder (assuming his foot stress fracture heals), DJ, Foreman, rounding out the 2nd team - wild card is how quick Marshalis R adapts to the speed and various responsibilities - athletic and will be impactful at some point, but likely one year away (needs to get stronger) and similar observations with Bowser.
I agree with all you said, but you haven't mentioned Anyanwu or Alajiki. Have you heard anything from players or coaches about them? Based on their online videos, they look to me to have great energy and athleticism, along with good ball handling and scoring skills. The videos for Anyanwu are not from last season, but still indicate some strong ability in his earlier years. They did not show him taking shots outside 12 feet, and with his rebounding, I would think he might be better able to play behind either Kelly or Grant. He seems faster and more athletic than Kelly. Alajiki looks very talented in his video. Fast and athletic, lots of moves getting to the basket, along with good shooting range. I'd project him more as a 2 or a 3. In any case, even in this small amount of highlight video, they both look more talented than either Lars, Thorpe, or Hyder, and more experienced than Kuany, so I would expect them to be on the 2nd unit, particularly at the 2 or 3, and maybe Anyanwu being able to fill in for a big. I would not be surprised if one of these two would press for a starting position.

I am hopeful, but hesitant about projecting too much for Shepherd, as I have yet to have much faith that players coming from low mid-major conferences can play well in the PAC12. The ones we have invited to Cal seem to have had most of their success in the pre-conference season, where there are some weak opponents, but when it comes to the PAC12, they haven't been able to sustain it. Betley, Foreman, South, Tarwater, have disappointed. Mullins was the only one I can remember who succeeded at Cal.
SFCityBear
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HoopDreams said:

I'm pretty worried about this team, especially with two key players coming off injuries

hopefully one or two players surprise, and everyone gets better with a regular offseason and a year's improvement in strength and experience
Why worry? We can't do much worse than 12th place, which is where we finished last season.

Last year was disastrous, with the combination of complications and uncertainties over the Covid shutdowns which at least eliminated summer practice, and the key injuries to Bradley and the illness and long recovery for Anticevich. After Fox's first season, where Cal finished in 8th place, there still was some support for Fox and the team, as we saw a few bright spots. The biggest loss from that roster was Paris Austin, and we hoped Brown would fill his shoes. It was also unfortunate that Hyder was not allowed to join the team right away, and we started without him, and then he later was injured. Bowser had that horrific collision and fall, missed several games, and later seemed to play seldom and play tentatively when he did play. I look at last season as an anomaly, and see no reason we can not equal our 8th place finish of 2020, and maybe finish higher.

I am encouraged by the emergence of Celestine last season, and by the small improvement in several players. We lack quality bigs, but I expect us to go small most of the time, hopefully small and fast. I'm impressed by the video of all the newcomers, and expect them all to contribute, hopefully in a big way.

SFCityBear
calumnus
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SFCityBear said:

HoopDreams said:

I'm pretty worried about this team, especially with two key players coming off injuries

hopefully one or two players surprise, and everyone gets better with a regular offseason and a year's improvement in strength and experience
Why worry? We can't do much worse than 12th place, which is where we finished last season.

Last year was disastrous, with the combination of complications and uncertainties over the Covid shutdowns which at least eliminated summer practice, and the key injuries to Bradley and the illness and long recovery for Anticevich. After Fox's first season, where Cal finished in 8th place, there still was some support for Fox and the team, as we saw a few bright spots. The biggest loss from that roster was Paris Austin, and we hoped Brown would fill his shoes. It was also unfortunate that Hyder was not allowed to join the team right away, and we started without him, and then he later was injured. Bowser had that horrific collision and fall, missed several games, and later seemed to play seldom and play tentatively when he did play. I look at last season as an anomaly, and see no reason we can not equal our 8th place finish of 2020, and maybe finish higher.

I am encouraged by the emergence of Celestine last season, and by the small improvement in several players. We lack quality bigs, but I expect us to go small most of the time, hopefully small and fast. I'm impressed by the video of all the newcomers, and expect them all to contribute, hopefully in a big way.




I expect we will go small and I expect we will go even slower. Small and slow but with little outside shooting. I think our defense will improve, but not enough to make up for the drop off on offense. We will definitely again contend for lowest scoring team in the nation (as we did last year).

I am eager to see the freshmen. Just like watching Celestine emerge was perhaps the highlight of last season, the chance that maybe one of the guys on the team emerges, even on a team that is losing games, will be one of the reasons to stay interested this year.
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