Thoughts?
Yes. Yes. Yes. I would also add that EXECUTION is supremely important. the highlights of this video show good spacing, good passing, good angle and good shooting (along with pretty mediocre defense). I believe that is where Monty excelled. Not so much in X's & O's (design), but in how his teams executed. My feeling since then, has been that the coaching staff was telling players what to do, but not how to do it. At least on offense. I believe Cuonzo and staff were explaining HOW to play solid defense and our teams generally executed that side of the ball well.ClayK said:
. . .
I do like having simple rules and not running set plays, but you also have to either run the system that works for your players or recruit players who work for your system. It's always difficult early in a college coach's career because you do want to put in your system (it takes a season or two to really settle in) but the personnel may not fit. So do you step back from installing your system, or endure the lack of fit?
ClayK said:
Interesting ... but like Dribble Drive Motion, you have to have perimeter players who can break defenders down off the dribble. It does no good to clear out the middle if the ballhandler can't get there.
And that was my problem with DDM -- if I had three kids who break defenders down off the dribble, it really didn't matter what I ran, because we were better.
On the flip side, one reason to run the pick and roll is to help a ballhandler get a mismatch or create space to operate, which is a necessity if he can't get by the defender on his own.
I do like having simple rules and not running set plays, but you also have to either run the system that works for your players or recruit players who work for your system. It's always difficult early in a college coach's career because you do want to put in your system (it takes a season or two to really settle in) but the personnel may not fit. So do you step back from installing your system, or endure the lack of fit?
So I take it that you probably were not so happy with Jeff Tedford's last few years, as that piece of cardboard that he carried around with him on the sidelines, the list of all his plays, grew bigger and bigger as the years went by? I'll bet he had 100 plays on that cardboard, and it isn't possible for the team to have practiced every one of those plays before a game so well that they were good at executing them. And the results over his last few years showed it, IMO.calumnus said:ClayK said:
Interesting ... but like Dribble Drive Motion, you have to have perimeter players who can break defenders down off the dribble. It does no good to clear out the middle if the ballhandler can't get there.
And that was my problem with DDM -- if I had three kids who break defenders down off the dribble, it really didn't matter what I ran, because we were better.
On the flip side, one reason to run the pick and roll is to help a ballhandler get a mismatch or create space to operate, which is a necessity if he can't get by the defender on his own.
I do like having simple rules and not running set plays, but you also have to either run the system that works for your players or recruit players who work for your system. It's always difficult early in a college coach's career because you do want to put in your system (it takes a season or two to really settle in) but the personnel may not fit. So do you step back from installing your system, or endure the lack of fit?
The key with college coaching is to be flexible in your approach because your roster is constantly changing. 4 years of eligibility, early entry, transfers, players academically ineligible. You can recruit players but there is no guarantee that they come. So you need to recruit toward your preferred style of play, but then use the system that is best for the players you actually have. You might want to run the above system, but if Shaq grew up a Cal fan and wants to play for you, you take him and adjust your plans. Too many college basketball coaches are wedded to their systems or way of doing things.
I agree that simple is best for college football and basketball. There is limited practice time. Practice execution. Better to do a few things well than a lot of things poorly.
In this day and age it should be abundantly clear that you need to recruit plenty of guys that can shoot the 3.
SFCityBear said:So I take it that you probably were not so happy with Jeff Tedford's last few years, as that piece of cardboard that he carried around with him on the sidelines, the list of all his plays, grew bigger and bigger as the years went by? I'll bet he had 100 plays on that cardboard, and it isn't possible for the team to have practiced every one of those plays before a game so well that they were good at executing them. And the results over his last few years showed it, IMO.calumnus said:ClayK said:
Interesting ... but like Dribble Drive Motion, you have to have perimeter players who can break defenders down off the dribble. It does no good to clear out the middle if the ballhandler can't get there.
And that was my problem with DDM -- if I had three kids who break defenders down off the dribble, it really didn't matter what I ran, because we were better.
On the flip side, one reason to run the pick and roll is to help a ballhandler get a mismatch or create space to operate, which is a necessity if he can't get by the defender on his own.
I do like having simple rules and not running set plays, but you also have to either run the system that works for your players or recruit players who work for your system. It's always difficult early in a college coach's career because you do want to put in your system (it takes a season or two to really settle in) but the personnel may not fit. So do you step back from installing your system, or endure the lack of fit?
The key with college coaching is to be flexible in your approach because your roster is constantly changing. 4 years of eligibility, early entry, transfers, players academically ineligible. You can recruit players but there is no guarantee that they come. So you need to recruit toward your preferred style of play, but then use the system that is best for the players you actually have. You might want to run the above system, but if Shaq grew up a Cal fan and wants to play for you, you take him and adjust your plans. Too many college basketball coaches are wedded to their systems or way of doing things.
I agree that simple is best for college football and basketball. There is limited practice time. Practice execution. Better to do a few things well than a lot of things poorly.
In this day and age it should be abundantly clear that you need to recruit plenty of guys that can shoot the 3.