HearstMining said:
SBGold said:
drizzlybear said:
SBGold, you are gold indeed. Your OP on 12/22 had a Midas touch.
Good for you. I really admire and appreciate your optimism and ability to continue to root along with our Bears even as the team has struggled badly this season (and prior seasons), yet without losing sight of the problems of the program. Strikes me as the right balance for us fans.
I'm still not ready to move these conference wins out of the fluke category, but like you I've gotten real enjoyment out of watching the Bears play pretty good looking ball the past couple weeks. Hopefully it will continue. Will be interesting to see how they fold Askew back in.
Kudos to you, SB, and Go Bears!!
Thanks Drizzly, I'm well aware of our deficiencies and while I did not see the Colo game, I did see most of the Fraud game and our deficiencies were really bailed out by fluky 3 point shooting. Clayton seems to cover up some of our flaws on offense, which will not happen in a lot of games (especially on the road). The Fraud game did cause me some concern on the boards, especially offensive. We are terrible at blocking out. Fraud got a lot of easy buckets and shot a high percentage but lost by 22. That won't happen often.
Personally, I would fold Askew in as a 6th man type. Don't give him free rein to be ball dominant, but ask that he come in and drive and attack the D.
Improve the d, try to play games in the 50s and 60s, and hopefully we can be competitive in some of these Pac 12 games. Go Bears!
I agree with you about Cal's rebounding - nobody blocks out. But if, by "play games in the 50s and 60s", you mean Cal should slow down their offense, I'm going to disagree. I don't believe this team can play "burn the clock" for 20 seconds of every possession and then suddenly get aggressive and score. I'm not saying they should fast-break or jack up a 3 at every possession, but they need to run their offense with the intent of creating a GOOD shot opportunity as soon as possible. They shouldn't make the shot-clock their enemy by waiting for the last few seconds to rush a shot.
I don't know if SBGold was implying that Cal should INTENTIONALLY minimize the number of possessions (slow down the game) by playing in the 50's and 60s or play to our strengths which may mean lower scoring games than average. Scoring and speed have a strong correlation - but with TODAY's common styles in college basketball (I know, not trying to get at Fox - living in the 90s), game scores seem to fall into these bands:
1. Intentionally slowing the game (FOX has pretty much declared this his mantra, but may have stepped away from it in Askew's absence). trying for 40' and 50's, but usually in the 60's - due to the inability to enforce ones will on the opponenent. Again - not sure this is what SBGold meant - if so, I disagree with him.
2. Intentionally speeding up the game. This would be in the 90's or higher - but could also be in the 80's depending on the opponent. When I spoke to Wyking at the beginning of his tenure - this is what he told me he wanted to do. Primarily because he thought he could recruit for it the best.
3. Playing to ones natural strengths. By this, I mean there is less focus on constantly forcing tempo and more focus on doing so tactically (i.e. end of game - foul problems - matchups) and taking what the defense gives. This could be anywhere from scores in the 60's & 70's to the 70' and 80's depending on what type of horses you have on your team.
I would prefer this years Cal team to play style 3 - probably on the low end due to our talent/depth. That means I'd like to see us scoring in the high 60s and 70s. A couple decades ago, all of these numbers may have been 10 pts lower - but the game has changed.