Sharing while we have a lull in the schedule. My older son is a senior at LMU and recently ran into Jordan Mathews at a pickup game on the courts at the bottom of the bluff by Playa Vista. My son grew up an avid Cal sports fan and instantly recognized Matthews. When the games were over the two of them shot around and chatted for nearly an hour. And my son asked him all about his time at Cal and Gonzaga. Among the things they discussed:
Toughest team to play against: West Virginia, tightest defense and very physical; rely on refs not willing to call everything.
Toughest players to defend: McDermott (Creighton) and Marquel Folz (UW)
Said the 2015/16 team was confident they would make it to the Final Four.
About his experience at Cal and Gonzaga, JM said: At Gonzaga, the players get treated "like royalty" and life/school is much easier there. At Cal you get no special treatment and are treated like every other student. He also said he felt they played better in the second half of the season at Cal because the early season was disrupted by December finals. (Obviously quarter systems also have finals in December, but maybe they're not as demanding because shorter term of content? Or maybe this comment was in comparison to quarter system finals in March vs no in-season finals in Spring semester?)
Comparing Cuonzo to Few, he said Cuonzo got players to play really hard. He said Few got players to play hard, too, but that Cuonzo had the ability to get you to play at another level. For Few he said he was really good at coaching to each player's/team's strengths.
The highlight for my son was about a basketball detail regarding Cuonzo. My son said it always bothered him how Cuonzo's teams defended screens, with big man hanging back to defend the roll rather than hedging hard on the screen, while on-ball defender fights over the screen. This was a highlight of the convo for my son because Mathews agreed with him on this point. He said Few, like most coaches?, has their big men hedge hard on the screens. You can see why a guard might prefer that approach, and the connection to how hard Cuonzo got his players to play.
While I'm sure my son was trying to play it cool, I know he was thrilled with this opportunity to play and chat hoops with a hero of his youth.
Toughest team to play against: West Virginia, tightest defense and very physical; rely on refs not willing to call everything.
Toughest players to defend: McDermott (Creighton) and Marquel Folz (UW)
Said the 2015/16 team was confident they would make it to the Final Four.
About his experience at Cal and Gonzaga, JM said: At Gonzaga, the players get treated "like royalty" and life/school is much easier there. At Cal you get no special treatment and are treated like every other student. He also said he felt they played better in the second half of the season at Cal because the early season was disrupted by December finals. (Obviously quarter systems also have finals in December, but maybe they're not as demanding because shorter term of content? Or maybe this comment was in comparison to quarter system finals in March vs no in-season finals in Spring semester?)
Comparing Cuonzo to Few, he said Cuonzo got players to play really hard. He said Few got players to play hard, too, but that Cuonzo had the ability to get you to play at another level. For Few he said he was really good at coaching to each player's/team's strengths.
The highlight for my son was about a basketball detail regarding Cuonzo. My son said it always bothered him how Cuonzo's teams defended screens, with big man hanging back to defend the roll rather than hedging hard on the screen, while on-ball defender fights over the screen. This was a highlight of the convo for my son because Mathews agreed with him on this point. He said Few, like most coaches?, has their big men hedge hard on the screens. You can see why a guard might prefer that approach, and the connection to how hard Cuonzo got his players to play.
While I'm sure my son was trying to play it cool, I know he was thrilled with this opportunity to play and chat hoops with a hero of his youth.