Lost opportunity
Shepherd trying for the foul
Shepherd trying for the foul
I think both Cal and Utah are a notch above Oregon State.fat_slice said:
Going to lose to the worst team in the conference. I guess that's will not be true after the game when we are undoubtedly the worst.
fat_slice said:
Going to lose to the worst team in the conference. I guess that's will not be true after the game when we are undoubtedly the worst.
stu said:I think both Cal and Utah are a notch above Oregon State.fat_slice said:
Going to lose to the worst team in the conference. I guess that's will not be true after the game when we are undoubtedly the worst.
We're positioning ourselves for the PAC-12 Tournament so we won't finish 9th and have to play Arizona in the second round.
HoopDreams said:
From my seats it was the perfect shot
The ball could have landed in your lap. Then you'd have a souvenir.bearister said:HoopDreams said:
From my seats it was the perfect shot
I agree. What was the better alternative scenario?
KenBurnski said:
Lars going full Beasten Moden
bearister said:HoopDreams said:
From my seats it was the perfect shot
I agree. What was the better alternative scenario?
bearister said:
Why did Sam play just 6 minutes?
You are assuming you are right about the reason for Alajiki only playing 6 minutes, and assuming that Fox was disciplining him. It may be true, or not. The game today depends a great deal on individual matchups, and those are not apparent in a box score. It may have been that Sam had been dominated by his defender, or Sam was getting eaten up when guarding his man. Putting him back in the game might have weakened his confidence further, and that is not good either. If Sam did commit some egregious error, it may have required some discipline. And Knight was someone who favored the tough love, discipline, but usually put the player right back in the game. Knight knew how to win, and most of Knight's players loved the guy. Newell loved Bobby and Newell was a disciplinarian as well, and also was loved by his players. But on the court most of Pete's players feared him, feared what he would do if they screwed up. And so they seldom did.calumnus said:bearister said:
Why did Sam play just 6 minutes?
He is credited with 2 turnovers, 1 PF and a missed 3 in those 6 minutes. Thus the likely answer is he was in the doghouse ala Bobby Knight.
Definitely would prefer to the coach try to settle down and build up the young player and then get him back in the game. Let him know you believe in him.
It's a good point. I'll try and watch the video of the game tomorrow.tthompson993 said:
Sam was a defensive liability in this game and you could see Fox talking to him before going to a commercial break. I would have given him a chance to redeem himself though in the second half.
SFCityBear said:You are assuming you are right about the reason for Alajiki only playing 6 minutes, and assuming that Fox was disciplining him. It may be true, or not. The game today depends a great deal on individual matchups, and those are not apparent in a box score. It may have been that Sam had been dominated by his defender, or Sam was getting eaten up when guarding his man. Putting him back in the game might have weakened his confidence further, and that is not good either. If Sam did commit some egregious error, it may have required some discipline. And Knight was someone who favored the tough love, discipline, but usually put the player right back in the game. Knight knew how to win, and most of Knight's players loved the guy. Newell loved Bobby and Newell was a disciplinarian as well, and also was loved by his players. But on the court most of Pete's players feared him, feared what he would do if they screwed up. And so they seldom did.calumnus said:bearister said:
Why did Sam play just 6 minutes?
He is credited with 2 turnovers, 1 PF and a missed 3 in those 6 minutes. Thus the likely answer is he was in the doghouse ala Bobby Knight.
Definitely would prefer to the coach try to settle down and build up the young player and then get him back in the game. Let him know you believe in him.
Here is a Newell story: I had a good friend who played for Newell at USF. My friend seldom played in games, but had a big role in practice. USF was playing a very good team, Kentucky, I believe, and they had an All-American guard. Newell had a card file on all the best players in the country, or at least the ones he expected to face. He told Marty to impersonate this guard in practice. He said that this guard had a habit of bringing the ball up the floor, and when he crossed the halfcourt line, he always took 2 dribbles, and then crossed over to his other hand. Newell told Marty to do this every time as they ran that play over and over in a scrimmage. They ran it, Marty crossed the half court line, took 2 dribbles and crossed over. After a few times, the Cal guards began to steal the ball from Marty right as he crossed over. They stole it from him over and over. Marty is a real competitor, and he could only take this for so long. So he decided to fake the crossover, keep the ball in the same hand, and drive past the guards for a layup. Newell saw that and exploded. He was ready to kill Marty. "Don't ever do that again, no matter what." Marty knew he'd have to obey Newell's every word from then on, or he would be kicked off the team.
It is tougher for coaches today, because they are very limited in what they can do to get players to do what they want. They are, IMO, very spoiled for the most part, and all of them think they will play in the NBA one day. There is no penalty for not obeying, and there are penalties for coaches like Knight and Newell for being hard on their players. And the players can and do transfer if they are not treated the way they want to be treated.
For a number of reasons I'm not worried about Alajiki's playing time.calumnus said:bearister said:
Why did Sam play just 6 minutes?
He is credited with 2 turnovers, 1 PF and a missed 3 in those 6 minutes. Thus the likely answer is he was in the doghouse ala Bobby Knight.
Definitely would prefer to the coach try to settle down and build up the young player and then get him back in the game. Let him know you believe in him.