UrsaMajor;842774930 said:
Also, the pain from the L hand can be distracting.
Totally agree. Ivan said later that he chose to play without the brace or wrap in the Seton hall game, because he felt it had been affecting his shots.
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Not to make excuses, but there must have been something in the venue since Princeton (bunch of white Ivy League types) also had a poor shooting night from the line (OK, not as poor as ours, but still...), and both teams were abysmal from the field until fairly late in the game. Rafftery and Johnson both commented on the backdrop and the lighting. And, even Seton Hall struggled at the line in the 2nd game.
The venue was a little antiquated and funky, but if there were something to it, then all the teams would likely have been affected adversely, and they weren’t. Princeton had only a slightly lower free throw percentage (65%) in the Cal game than they had for the season prior to the Cal game (68%). And Princeton shot free throws at a very nice 87% in their game vs Hawaii. I’m not sure what the shooter’s color or his league have to do with how well he shoots free throws, but our “white Ivy Leaguer”, Grant Mullins had little trouble with free throws, going 4-5 against Princeton, in his only attempts in Pearl Harbor.
In the Pearl Harbor gym, Princeton shot free throws at 75% for the two games, compared to 68% for the season prior to the tournament. Hawaii shot free throws at 70% in the tournament and 70% prior to the tournament. Seton Hall shot free throws at 47% in the tourney as compared with 65% prior, and Cal shot 44% in the tourney as compared to 68% prior.
I looked at threes, and Princeton shot them at 32% in the tourney vs 31% prior to the tourney. Hawaii shot them at 27% in the tourney vs 32% prior. Seton Hall shot them a little better at 38% in the tourney, vs 35% prior. Cal really struggled from three, shooting them at only 20% in the tourney, vs 31% prior to the tourney.
Maybe Cal recruits a higher more elite class of player who hasn’t spent a lot of time growing up playing in old funky gyms with funky rims.
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There's not much a college coach can do regarding FT shooting. Monty's stock answer about how to improve shooting: "recruit better shooters."
You may be right, but I find it hard to believe a coach can’t teach a player to shoot better, especially an easy shot like a free throw. I learned to shoot free throws by the fifth grade, and I was damn good at it. I had to be, because in order to get chosen for a team in a schoolyard pickup game, we shot free throws. The first ten kids to make their free throw got selected to play in the game, and I wanted to play. If you missed, you went home. I see mechanical things wrong with most of our players, and with their routines. Nowadays with all the videotape we have, it should be simple for coaches and players to see their mistakes and learn from them. Perhaps easier said than done. But players with unorthodox techniques are able to shoot 75% with practice. To do better than that, to get to 90%, a player does need certain physical attributes, like a good eye, good depth perception and good eye-hand coordination. Then there is the mental side. Coach Al McGuire said he would rather have a C student take the free throw to tie or win the game at the end, than have the A student take it, because the A student will likely figure out more ways to miss it. I’m guessing that is the problem some of our players are having.