For many of us, Cal offense left a lot to be desired the last two seasons. The offense just did not look as good as we expected. The players all had their good moments, but the team did not work well together on offense to make baskets. Evaluating team play on offense is more a subjective matter, but the statistical side can indicate some trends, especially assists. Assists per game, and the ratio of assists to made field goals tell us how often a team's baskets are the result of a pass. This is not the total picture, because there are no stats for how often a shooter was helped by a screen from a teammate, for example.
Cal's 2016 team had 12.6 assists per game, and their Assist to Field Goals Made Ratio was 48%. Cal's 2015 team was nearly the same, averaging 12.5 assists per game and their A/FGM Ratio was 50%.
Assists have been recorded at Cal beginning in 1969. There are only 3 teams in the last 48 years which made fewer assists per game or had a lower Assist to Field Goal Ratio than the Cuonzo Martin teams of 2015 and 2016:
1976: Assists to Field Goals Made = 40% This was a Dick Edwards team, with Gene Ransom and Ricky Hawthorne responsible for nearly all the assists (11.8 per game)
1984: 11.3 Assists per game, ranked #266 out of 275 teams, and the lowest Cal total in the last 48 years. This was a Dick Kuchen team with Butch Hays, Kevin Johnson, and Chris Washington
1998: A/FGM Ratio = 46% This was a Ben Braun team, with Geno Carlisle and Thomas Kilgore getting a total of only 5 assists between them, and 2nd stringer Circus King leading the team with 3 assists per game. Team total was 11.9 assists per game.
Even Lou Campanelli (who most fans, including me, believed was not a good offensive coach) had better offensive teams. Lou's worst offensive team based on assists per game was 1988, at 14.7 assists per game, and that was also Gary Colson's first year with the Bears. Lou's best offensive year was Colson's second year, when the Bears averaged 18.5 assists per game, the highest in 48 years, and an A/FGM Ratio of 69%, also the highest at Cal in 48 years. Campanelli's teams had an A/FGM Ratio of 60% or better in all of his years at Cal, except 1992, where the Ratio was 57.
Last season's NCAA Championship game pitted Villanova (15.9 Assists per game, A/FGM Ratio = 59%) against North Carolina (17.8 Assists per game, A/FGM Ratio = 57%). If Cal wants to eventually reach this elite status, one way to do this would be to try and look like the teams that share the ball more. This way of playing gives teams who do not have a roster loaded with 5-star players a way to compete with the teams who do have lots of 5 star players.
All the top teams of last season that I looked at share the ball more than Cal does. So if Cal does not begin to play this way, then we need to have a steady stream of 5-star recruits every season to replace the ones who leave the program early for the draft or to transfer. Cuonzo Martin can coach defense. Cuonzo Martin can recruit at a high level. So far we have seen little or no evidence that he can coach players to share the ball in an offense. Pete Newell once said the two-man play is the essence of basketball. We see very little of this from Martin's teams. What we have seen looks to me like the one-man play is the essence of our basketball now. Our half-court game is "Take it the rim. Make a play." Our fast break or transition game is essentially one player dribbling coast to coast with the ball and taking a shot. The only way this kind of offense is successful is to always have four or five great one-on-one players on the floor at all times. But many coaches, beginning with Pete Newell, proved one-on-one offenses can be stopped. John Wooden proved that four or five outstanding players sharing the ball cannot be stopped. That is the ideal offense, and the one that most coaches aspire to have, but it also can sometimes require a great coach to get great individual players to work together.
This season should tell us more about Martin as a coach: whether he can up his game to include more sharing the ball or not. He does not have as many great individual players this season, as far as we know, so it is an ideal time to start emphasizing sharing the ball over "take it to the rim". If he can't do this, perhaps bringing in an assistant to coach the players on offense would be the answer to getting Cal to the next level. Gary Colson. Bobby Knight, and Brad Duggan are perhaps too old for the job, but there are probably plenty of offensive minds out there waiting for just such an opportunity.
Cal's 2016 team had 12.6 assists per game, and their Assist to Field Goals Made Ratio was 48%. Cal's 2015 team was nearly the same, averaging 12.5 assists per game and their A/FGM Ratio was 50%.
Assists have been recorded at Cal beginning in 1969. There are only 3 teams in the last 48 years which made fewer assists per game or had a lower Assist to Field Goal Ratio than the Cuonzo Martin teams of 2015 and 2016:
1976: Assists to Field Goals Made = 40% This was a Dick Edwards team, with Gene Ransom and Ricky Hawthorne responsible for nearly all the assists (11.8 per game)
1984: 11.3 Assists per game, ranked #266 out of 275 teams, and the lowest Cal total in the last 48 years. This was a Dick Kuchen team with Butch Hays, Kevin Johnson, and Chris Washington
1998: A/FGM Ratio = 46% This was a Ben Braun team, with Geno Carlisle and Thomas Kilgore getting a total of only 5 assists between them, and 2nd stringer Circus King leading the team with 3 assists per game. Team total was 11.9 assists per game.
Even Lou Campanelli (who most fans, including me, believed was not a good offensive coach) had better offensive teams. Lou's worst offensive team based on assists per game was 1988, at 14.7 assists per game, and that was also Gary Colson's first year with the Bears. Lou's best offensive year was Colson's second year, when the Bears averaged 18.5 assists per game, the highest in 48 years, and an A/FGM Ratio of 69%, also the highest at Cal in 48 years. Campanelli's teams had an A/FGM Ratio of 60% or better in all of his years at Cal, except 1992, where the Ratio was 57.
Last season's NCAA Championship game pitted Villanova (15.9 Assists per game, A/FGM Ratio = 59%) against North Carolina (17.8 Assists per game, A/FGM Ratio = 57%). If Cal wants to eventually reach this elite status, one way to do this would be to try and look like the teams that share the ball more. This way of playing gives teams who do not have a roster loaded with 5-star players a way to compete with the teams who do have lots of 5 star players.
All the top teams of last season that I looked at share the ball more than Cal does. So if Cal does not begin to play this way, then we need to have a steady stream of 5-star recruits every season to replace the ones who leave the program early for the draft or to transfer. Cuonzo Martin can coach defense. Cuonzo Martin can recruit at a high level. So far we have seen little or no evidence that he can coach players to share the ball in an offense. Pete Newell once said the two-man play is the essence of basketball. We see very little of this from Martin's teams. What we have seen looks to me like the one-man play is the essence of our basketball now. Our half-court game is "Take it the rim. Make a play." Our fast break or transition game is essentially one player dribbling coast to coast with the ball and taking a shot. The only way this kind of offense is successful is to always have four or five great one-on-one players on the floor at all times. But many coaches, beginning with Pete Newell, proved one-on-one offenses can be stopped. John Wooden proved that four or five outstanding players sharing the ball cannot be stopped. That is the ideal offense, and the one that most coaches aspire to have, but it also can sometimes require a great coach to get great individual players to work together.
This season should tell us more about Martin as a coach: whether he can up his game to include more sharing the ball or not. He does not have as many great individual players this season, as far as we know, so it is an ideal time to start emphasizing sharing the ball over "take it to the rim". If he can't do this, perhaps bringing in an assistant to coach the players on offense would be the answer to getting Cal to the next level. Gary Colson. Bobby Knight, and Brad Duggan are perhaps too old for the job, but there are probably plenty of offensive minds out there waiting for just such an opportunity.