bowers and celestine. can they shoot 3's ??? are they any good ??? advise, thanks
calgo430 said:
bowers and celestine. can they shoot 3's ??? are they any good ??? advise, thanks
Disagree about Bowser. In this video () he makes multiple threes and shows excellent shooting form. He is number #24.OaktownBear said:calgo430 said:
bowers and celestine. can they shoot 3's ??? are they any good ??? advise, thanks
Just from what I can find on the internet, Celestine shot 44% from 3. Bowser doesn't seem to be really a shooter.
"excellent form?"sluggo said:Disagree about Bowser. In this video () he makes multiple threes and shows excellent shooting form. He is number #24.OaktownBear said:calgo430 said:
bowers and celestine. can they shoot 3's ??? are they any good ??? advise, thanks
Just from what I can find on the internet, Celestine shot 44% from 3. Bowser doesn't seem to be really a shooter.
Sluggo
This. You really need to have at least one rotation that can legitimately play 4 or 5 out. THis year's version....not so much.BeachedBear said:
Power conference recruiting has and is changing. With transfers and player mobility, coaching staffs will likely be recruiting for classes of six or seven vs classes of three or four. Furthermore, since player transfers can be out of synch with HS recruting - it doesn't seem pragmatic to recruit for need so much (although those will always exist). Therefore, I expect this class to be much larger than replacing Austin and South.
To compete in the P12, your 12 man roster ideally would have a blend of ball handlers, long wings and posts ALL of whom can shoot, defend and rebound. Most of P12 and top WCC programs have already figured that out. Our roster has not reflected this in a while
We currently have one player that fits the shoot, defend, rebound mold in Bradley (maybe Gordon if healthy). So there is room to recruit many different types of players, but all of them should be able to shoot, defend and rebound.
I think I have been plenty critical over the years. If I wanted to be harsh about Bowser I could say that he does not look particularly strong or quick. If the standard is Theo Robertson/Allen Crabbe, then his form needs work. If rather it is every other Cal recruit of the last 30 years, his form is excellent.socaltownie said:"excellent form?"sluggo said:Disagree about Bowser. In this videoOaktownBear said:calgo430 said:
dadfafadabowers and celestine. can they shoot 3's ??? are they any good ??? advise, thanks
Just from what I can find on the internet, Celestine shot 44% from 3. Bowser doesn't seem to be really a shooter.
he makes multiple threes and shows excellent shooting form. He is number #24.
Sluggo
Well he shoots better than I do but he brings it WAY too low and then essentially does a push shot that is SLOOOOWWWWW. That will get swatted back at him repeatedly. So he will need a LOT of work and, like so much of this roster, will require teammates to help him get open looks as opposed to what every other PAc-12 team can do - have 1 or 2 guys with the individual talent to make their own shot....something even Furd had.
Honestly this program will NOT get better until its "fans" start to look at the roster with a critical eye. I am sure a great kid. Would never get offered by upper half teams in the conference.
Do you think it is too early to bring in an assistant who can coach offense, like a Gary Colson? Right now our offense is total chaos, with players trying wildly to create their own shots, and not looking for an open man, and turning the ball over at a high rate. Cal had 17 buckets on a paltry 3 assists, while Stanford had 25 buckets on 14 assists which is very good. 3 assists for an entire basketball game is pathetic.sluggo said:I think I have been plenty critical over the years. If I wanted to be harsh about Bowser I could say that he does not look particularly strong or quick. If the standard is Theo Robertson/Allen Crabbe, then his form needs work. If rather it is every other Cal recruit of the last 30 years, his form is excellent.socaltownie said:"excellent form?"sluggo said:Disagree about Bowser. In this videoOaktownBear said:calgo430 said:
dadfafadabowers and celestine. can they shoot 3's ??? are they any good ??? advise, thanks
Just from what I can find on the internet, Celestine shot 44% from 3. Bowser doesn't seem to be really a shooter.
he makes multiple threes and shows excellent shooting form. He is number #24.
Sluggo
Well he shoots better than I do but he brings it WAY too low and then essentially does a push shot that is SLOOOOWWWWW. That will get swatted back at him repeatedly. So he will need a LOT of work and, like so much of this roster, will require teammates to help him get open looks as opposed to what every other PAc-12 team can do - have 1 or 2 guys with the individual talent to make their own shot....something even Furd had.
Honestly this program will NOT get better until its "fans" start to look at the roster with a critical eye. I am sure a great kid. Would never get offered by upper half teams in the conference.
More than players who can create their own shots Cal needs a competent coach who can help their players get good shots. Fox was known not to run good offenses, and he is living up to his reputation.
Sluggo
I don't think it is coaching or at least not coaching vs. just a complete lack of talent. There were PLENTY of times our point guard is open. We just don't have a point guard who can shoot the three.SFCityBear said:Do you think it is too early to bring in an assistant who can coach offense, like a Gary Colson? Right now our offense is total chaos, with players trying wildly to create their own shots, and not looking for an open man, and turning the ball over at a high rate. Cal had 17 buckets on a paltry 3 assists, while Stanford had 25 buckets on 14 assists which is very good. 3 assists for an entire basketball game is pathetic.sluggo said:I think I have been plenty critical over the years. If I wanted to be harsh about Bowser I could say that he does not look particularly strong or quick. If the standard is Theo Robertson/Allen Crabbe, then his form needs work. If rather it is every other Cal recruit of the last 30 years, his form is excellent.socaltownie said:"excellent form?"sluggo said:Disagree about Bowser. In this videoOaktownBear said:calgo430 said:
dadfafadabowers and celestine. can they shoot 3's ??? are they any good ??? advise, thanks
Just from what I can find on the internet, Celestine shot 44% from 3. Bowser doesn't seem to be really a shooter.
he makes multiple threes and shows excellent shooting form. He is number #24.
Sluggo
Well he shoots better than I do but he brings it WAY too low and then essentially does a push shot that is SLOOOOWWWWW. That will get swatted back at him repeatedly. So he will need a LOT of work and, like so much of this roster, will require teammates to help him get open looks as opposed to what every other PAc-12 team can do - have 1 or 2 guys with the individual talent to make their own shot....something even Furd had.
Honestly this program will NOT get better until its "fans" start to look at the roster with a critical eye. I am sure a great kid. Would never get offered by upper half teams in the conference.
More than players who can create their own shots Cal needs a competent coach who can help their players get good shots. Fox was known not to run good offenses, and he is living up to his reputation.
Sluggo
I agree with you, but I think what we need first is is point guard to run the offense. We have no captain, no one who takes charge out there on the floor. Austin was not great last year, but he was much better than he is this year. What happened? Is he still hampered by injury?parentswerebears said:
We need Theos and Alans. They are the players that will make Cal a better program.
And I completely agree about coaching.
sluggo said:I think I have been plenty critical over the years. If I wanted to be harsh about Bowser I could say that he does not look particularly strong or quick. If the standard is Theo Robertson/Allen Crabbe, then his form needs work. If rather it is every other Cal recruit of the last 30 years, his form is excellent.socaltownie said:"excellent form?"sluggo said:Disagree about Bowser. In this videoOaktownBear said:calgo430 said:
dadfafadabowers and celestine. can they shoot 3's ??? are they any good ??? advise, thanks
Just from what I can find on the internet, Celestine shot 44% from 3. Bowser doesn't seem to be really a shooter.
he makes multiple threes and shows excellent shooting form. He is number #24.
Sluggo
Well he shoots better than I do but he brings it WAY too low and then essentially does a push shot that is SLOOOOWWWWW. That will get swatted back at him repeatedly. So he will need a LOT of work and, like so much of this roster, will require teammates to help him get open looks as opposed to what every other PAc-12 team can do - have 1 or 2 guys with the individual talent to make their own shot....something even Furd had.
Honestly this program will NOT get better until its "fans" start to look at the roster with a critical eye. I am sure a great kid. Would never get offered by upper half teams in the conference.
More than players who can create their own shots Cal needs a competent coach who can help their players get good shots. Fox was known not to run good offenses, and he is living up to his reputation.
Sluggo
Other than when Cal brought in Colson, I can't think of this ever happening. It is a nice dream. That Cal repeatedly hires such bad coaches is exasperating.SFCityBear said:
Do you think it is too early to bring in an assistant who can coach offense, like a Gary Colson? Right now our offense is total chaos, with players trying wildly to create their own shots, and not looking for an open man, and turning the ball over at a high rate. Cal had 17 buckets on a paltry 3 assists, while Stanford had 25 buckets on 14 assists which is very good. 3 assists for an entire basketball game is pathetic.
That is the full limit of scholarship players. The full roster also includes walk-ons and there doesn't seem to be a limit on how many of those a team can have.UrsaMajor said:
Correction, BB. A full roster is 13, not 12.
Correct, SFCity. I was referring to the scholarship roster. Should have been clearer.SFCityBear said:That is the full limit of scholarship players. The full roster also includes walk-ons and there doesn't seem to be a limit on how many of those a team can have.UrsaMajor said:
Correction, BB. A full roster is 13, not 12.
I am at least as exasperated as you are about the quality of the coaches we hire. The reasons there can be too much dribbling, is the dribbler is trying to create an opening for himself against a good defense, or his teammates are not open, or his coach has not told him not to dribble so much. If the dribbler's teammates are not open, then the defense is beating them to spots and not permitting them to get open, or they are not moving enough to get open. This can all be happening if there is no plan, few plays, or the players are not executing. Much of this is on the coach, his responsibility, and much of it can be due to the attitude of the players.sluggo said:Other than when Cal brought in Colson, I can't think of this ever happening. It is a nice dream. That Cal repeatedly hires such bad coaches is exasperating.SFCityBear said:
Do you think it is too early to bring in an assistant who can coach offense, like a Gary Colson? Right now our offense is total chaos, with players trying wildly to create their own shots, and not looking for an open man, and turning the ball over at a high rate. Cal had 17 buckets on a paltry 3 assists, while Stanford had 25 buckets on 14 assists which is very good. 3 assists for an entire basketball game is pathetic.
I am not concerned with offensive stats. I would like to see purposeful activity and action away from the ball so that when Cal inevitably gets better talent, they will succeed. I don't see that. I do see much too much dribbling.
Sluggo
SFCityBear said:I am at least as exasperated as you are about the quality of the coaches we hire. The reasons there can be too much dribbling, is the dribbler is trying to create an opening for himself against a good defense, or his teammates are not open, or his coach has not told him not to dribble so much. If the dribbler's teammates are not open, then the defense is beating them to spots and not permitting them to get open, or they are not moving enough to get open. This can all be happening if there is no plan, few plays, or the players are not executing. Much of this is on the coach, his responsibility, and much of it can be due to the attitude of the players.sluggo said:Other than when Cal brought in Colson, I can't think of this ever happening. It is a nice dream. That Cal repeatedly hires such bad coaches is exasperating.SFCityBear said:
Do you think it is too early to bring in an assistant who can coach offense, like a Gary Colson? Right now our offense is total chaos, with players trying wildly to create their own shots, and not looking for an open man, and turning the ball over at a high rate. Cal had 17 buckets on a paltry 3 assists, while Stanford had 25 buckets on 14 assists which is very good. 3 assists for an entire basketball game is pathetic.
I am not concerned with offensive stats. I would like to see purposeful activity and action away from the ball so that when Cal inevitably gets better talent, they will succeed. I don't see that. I do see much too much dribbling.
Sluggo
I look at stats a lot, because they can tell us things we might miss just watching the game, or they might support or disprove the opinion I formed while watching the game. We have the double whammy - we look bad, and we have bad stats, and that equals beaucoup losses.
The problem at the moment is that we are getting worse, not improving at the moment. 3 assists is our low mark for the season. We average 9 assists per game which ranks us #345 in the country out of 350 D1 teams, so when you only get 3 assists in a game, that is really awful, and you are almost guaranteed not to win any games like that. 3 assists means we are not finding players for open shots, we are not penetrating and dishing. I mean Jason Kidd already had 3 assists by himself while lacing up his sneakers in the locker room before a game. We have a point guard, Austin, who was barely adequate last season, with 4 assists per game, and this season he is averaging less than 2 per game. Brown, our supposed hope for the future, also averages less than 2 assists. We had 12 assists against St Marys, and looked decent in that game. In the next game against BC, we had 10. Against Harvard, we had 6, and against Stanford, we had only 3. Is this a trend? And why is Austin playing worse than last season. I suspect Fox's offense is either hard to learn, or hardly even exists, like Cuonzo's offense. Hand the ball to the players and tell'em, "Go play."
If you want them to stop dribbling, you have to tell them to move more, work hard to get open. You have to run pick and rolls, and other simple 2-man plays. Tell them not to play hero ball and shoot whenever they get the ball. That is what it looks like out there, nervous chaos and hero ball. And I would slow the pace, because the fast pace is causing many of the turnovers. We make 14 TOs per game. 18 against Stanford. If the players are not all-stars, then a slower pace is better. And not just in transistion. We run our half-court sets too fast also, IMO. I know slower basketball is ugly for many fans here, but do we want to play better and maybe win some games or look pretty losing? Right now, we are doing neither.
What makes me crazy is that I am sure that the answer is no. But if you are so incompetent that you would not want to watch video, you can get your basketball crazy intern (me thirty years ago) to watch for you. I could have told you Fox was a no go. Better yet, you have a couple of friends in the basketball business who can give you unbiased advice.OaktownBear said:SFCityBear said:I am at least as exasperated as you are about the quality of the coaches we hire. The reasons there can be too much dribbling, is the dribbler is trying to create an opening for himself against a good defense, or his teammates are not open, or his coach has not told him not to dribble so much. If the dribbler's teammates are not open, then the defense is beating them to spots and not permitting them to get open, or they are not moving enough to get open. This can all be happening if there is no plan, few plays, or the players are not executing. Much of this is on the coach, his responsibility, and much of it can be due to the attitude of the players.sluggo said:Other than when Cal brought in Colson, I can't think of this ever happening. It is a nice dream. That Cal repeatedly hires such bad coaches is exasperating.SFCityBear said:
Do you think it is too early to bring in an assistant who can coach offense, like a Gary Colson? Right now our offense is total chaos, with players trying wildly to create their own shots, and not looking for an open man, and turning the ball over at a high rate. Cal had 17 buckets on a paltry 3 assists, while Stanford had 25 buckets on 14 assists which is very good. 3 assists for an entire basketball game is pathetic.
I am not concerned with offensive stats. I would like to see purposeful activity and action away from the ball so that when Cal inevitably gets better talent, they will succeed. I don't see that. I do see much too much dribbling.
Sluggo
I look at stats a lot, because they can tell us things we might miss just watching the game, or they might support or disprove the opinion I formed while watching the game. We have the double whammy - we look bad, and we have bad stats, and that equals beaucoup losses.
The problem at the moment is that we are getting worse, not improving at the moment. 3 assists is our low mark for the season. We average 9 assists per game which ranks us #345 in the country out of 350 D1 teams, so when you only get 3 assists in a game, that is really awful, and you are almost guaranteed not to win any games like that. 3 assists means we are not finding players for open shots, we are not penetrating and dishing. I mean Jason Kidd already had 3 assists by himself while lacing up his sneakers in the locker room before a game. We have a point guard, Austin, who was barely adequate last season, with 4 assists per game, and this season he is averaging less than 2 per game. Brown, our supposed hope for the future, also averages less than 2 assists. We had 12 assists against St Marys, and looked decent in that game. In the next game against BC, we had 10. Against Harvard, we had 6, and against Stanford, we had only 3. Is this a trend? And why is Austin playing worse than last season. I suspect Fox's offense is either hard to learn, or hardly even exists, like Cuonzo's offense. Hand the ball to the players and tell'em, "Go play."
If you want them to stop dribbling, you have to tell them to move more, work hard to get open. You have to run pick and rolls, and other simple 2-man plays. Tell them not to play hero ball and shoot whenever they get the ball. That is what it looks like out there, nervous chaos and hero ball. And I would slow the pace, because the fast pace is causing many of the turnovers. We make 14 TOs per game. 18 against Stanford. If the players are not all-stars, then a slower pace is better. And not just in transistion. We run our half-court sets too fast also, IMO. I know slower basketball is ugly for many fans here, but do we want to play better and maybe win some games or look pretty losing? Right now, we are doing neither.
Random question: Does anyone think in the 2 days he spent debating who to hire that Knowlton looked at any film of the coaching candidates' teams in action. You got a search firm. I'd tell them I want video of the candidates' three best and worst games of the last two years.
By the way, I'm sure the answer is no.
Personally, if I'm an athletic director I don't give a damn how well a coach shmoozed me in the interview
stanford has recruited pretty well and actually under performedKoreAmBear said:
I don't follow Furd hoops but how did they turn it around so quick? By getting a couple of Mickey D AA types like Davis? Our outlook could be completely different if Fox and his staff could just 2 elite ballers or some stud Aussie. I thought the staff he assembled could recruit.
I'm not so sure Stanford has turned anything around. Who has Stanford beaten? No one of note, as yet. They have played only one ranked team,, #3 Kansas, and lost to them by 16. Last season, Stanford played #2 Kansas and lost by 6 in overtime. Even Cal has played a tougher pre-conference schedule. Last season, Stanford played a much tougher pre-conference season, losing to #7 North Carolina by 18, losing to #25 Wisconsin by 16, and losing to #2 Kansas by 6 in OT. In conference, Stanford played #25 Washington and lost by 16 and by 1 in two games.KoreAmBear said:
I don't follow Furd hoops but how did they turn it around so quick? By getting a couple of Mickey D AA types like Davis? Our outlook could be completely different if Fox and his staff could just 2 elite ballers or some stud Aussie. I thought the staff he assembled could recruit.
fair enoughSFCityBear said:I'm not so sure Stanford has turned anything around. Who has Stanford beaten? No one of note, as yet. They have played only one ranked team,, #3 Kansas, and lost to them by 16. Last season, Stanford played #2 Kansas and lost by 6 in overtime. Even Cal has played a tougher pre-conference schedule. Last season, Stanford played a much tougher pre-conference season, losing to #7 North Carolina by 18, losing to #25 Wisconsin by 16, and losing to #2 Kansas by 6 in OT. In conference, Stanford played #25 Washington and lost by 16 and by 1 in two games.KoreAmBear said:
I don't follow Furd hoops but how did they turn it around so quick? By getting a couple of Mickey D AA types like Davis? Our outlook could be completely different if Fox and his staff could just 2 elite ballers or some stud Aussie. I thought the staff he assembled could recruit.
Last year, Stanford had FOUR top 100 recruits on their roster. With Okpala leaving, this year they have only THREE top 100 recruits. They did not land any more top 100 recruits, according to sports-reference.com. Even coach Haase said that this year's team is not as talented as his previous teams. Could it be that losing Okpala, one of his "elite ballers", made Haase a better coach and Stanford a better looking team, because they play more together now, (if this one game is any indication).
Last season, Cal lost to Stanford by 3, and then Cal beat them by 5. Maybe it is Cal who has not improved, and maybe gotten worse. I think it is too early to say Stanford has turned anything around, just because they beat a Cal team with many new players and a new coach, all really struggling to get on the same page.. Let's wait and see how Stanford does in conference.
I guess you overlooked Butler, who beat Stanford by 1 on a neutral court, and is ranked as high as #3.....Stanford SOS is 99th.....but they have beaten everyone else that has taken the court with them....SFCityBear said:I'm not so sure Stanford has turned anything around. Who has Stanford beaten? No one of note, as yet. They have played only one ranked team,, #3 Kansas, and lost to them by 16.KoreAmBear said:
I don't follow Furd hoops but how did they turn it around so quick? By getting a couple of Mickey D AA types like Davis? Our outlook could be completely different if Fox and his staff could just 2 elite ballers or some stud Aussie. I thought the staff he assembled could recruit.
Thanks for this, but no, I didn't overlook Butler. I did wonder how good they are, and still do. Butler was unranked in the AP Top 25 at the time they played Stanford. They have won a lot of games so far, but the only AP-ranked team Butler has played so far was #11 Baylor, and Baylor beat Butler by one point. Butler is now ranked #11 themselves by AP.bearmanpg said:I guess you overlooked Butler, who beat Stanford by 1 on a neutral court, and is ranked as high as #3.....Stanford SOS is 99th.....but they have beaten everyone else that has taken the court with them....SFCityBear said:I'm not so sure Stanford has turned anything around. Who has Stanford beaten? No one of note, as yet. They have played only one ranked team,, #3 Kansas, and lost to them by 16.KoreAmBear said:
I don't follow Furd hoops but how did they turn it around so quick? By getting a couple of Mickey D AA types like Davis? Our outlook could be completely different if Fox and his staff could just 2 elite ballers or some stud Aussie. I thought the staff he assembled could recruit.
If the interview doesn't produce a plan for improvement that includes the actual players available, the actual limitations there might be in year one and year two, potential assistants, and the type of team envisioned along with a recruiting plan to get there I doubt I'd even get to video. Pass that test and I'd look at video and want to talk to knowledgeable people who are familiar with the coach but not friends with the coach to assess strengths and weaknesses. But then, a good AD has networked his ass off and come up with potential candidates before a search firm even gets into the process.OaktownBear said:
Random question: Does anyone think in the 2 days he spent debating who to hire that Knowlton looked at any film of the coaching candidates' teams in action. You got a search firm. I'd tell them I want video of the candidates' three best and worst games of the last two years.
By the way, I'm sure the answer is no.
Personally, if I'm an athletic director I don't give a damn how well a coach shmoozed me in the interview
Please use a different example. I hate that guy's game.calgo430 said:
bottom line get a really good scorer who can create. one james harden prospect would be good for all cal bball fans.
Don't take this as approving the current process, but I've watched Cal basketball since Dick Edwards and Cal did exactly what you suggest when they hired Dick Kuchen. Results were not better. OK, maybe his rep was more in recruiting than player development, but it's not that simple.sluggo said:
What makes me crazy is that I am sure that the answer is no. But if you are so incompetent that you would not want to watch video, you can get your basketball crazy intern (me thirty years ago) to watch for you. I could have told you Fox was a no go. Better yet, you have a couple of friends in the basketball business who can give you unbiased advice.
I have watched Cal basketball since the Campanelli era. If we exclude recruiting, there has only been one above average coach (Montgomery) and six (Campy, Bozeman, Braun, Martin, Jones, Fox) below average coaches. It is not so damn hard. Go to a program that has good player development and in-game coaching and take the top assistant. They don't charge much because they want a head coaching gig and you get someone who is good at basketball coaching. Maybe I should start a search firm.
Sluggo
I agree. I think I remember Kuchen being highly regarded as an assistant at Notre Dame at working with big men, and also regarded as an excellent teacher of the motion offense. Unfortunately, it didn't translate into success at Cal.bluesaxe said:Don't take this as approving the current process, but I've watched Cal basketball since Dick Edwards and Cal did exactly what you suggest when they hired Dick Kuchen. Results were not better. OK, maybe his rep was more in recruiting than player development, but it's not that simple.sluggo said:
What makes me crazy is that I am sure that the answer is no. But if you are so incompetent that you would not want to watch video, you can get your basketball crazy intern (me thirty years ago) to watch for you. I could have told you Fox was a no go. Better yet, you have a couple of friends in the basketball business who can give you unbiased advice.
I have watched Cal basketball since the Campanelli era. If we exclude recruiting, there has only been one above average coach (Montgomery) and six (Campy, Bozeman, Braun, Martin, Jones, Fox) below average coaches. It is not so damn hard. Go to a program that has good player development and in-game coaching and take the top assistant. They don't charge much because they want a head coaching gig and you get someone who is good at basketball coaching. Maybe I should start a search firm.
Sluggo
Even if you exclude recruiting, I would say that both Campanelli and Braun were above average coaches. They had their deficiencies, but they had winning records, Campanelli at both James Madison and Cal, and Braun at Eastern Michigan and Cal, with only his years at Rice having an overall losing record at that school, and much of that was due to departure of several players, if i remember right. By excluding recruiting, and calling Campanelli and Braun below average coaches, I think you are implying the reason for their success was the star players they recruited. I don't remember seeing Campanelli's or Braun's teams using their star players to play a lot of one on one basketball, unlike the Cal teams of Bozeman (after Kidd), Martin, and Jones, all of whom I would agree are below average coaches, unable to win much without great recruits (and maybe Jones could not win with great recruits). I'd consider Campanelli a very good defensive coach, and weak offensively, Braun pretty good at both, not as good as Montgomery at either, but still above average.sluggo said:What makes me crazy is that I am sure that the answer is no. But if you are so incompetent that you would not want to watch video, you can get your basketball crazy intern (me thirty years ago) to watch for you. I could have told you Fox was a no go. Better yet, you have a couple of friends in the basketball business who can give you unbiased advice.OaktownBear said:SFCityBear said:I am at least as exasperated as you are about the quality of the coaches we hire. The reasons there can be too much dribbling, is the dribbler is trying to create an opening for himself against a good defense, or his teammates are not open, or his coach has not told him not to dribble so much. If the dribbler's teammates are not open, then the defense is beating them to spots and not permitting them to get open, or they are not moving enough to get open. This can all be happening if there is no plan, few plays, or the players are not executing. Much of this is on the coach, his responsibility, and much of it can be due to the attitude of the players.sluggo said:Other than when Cal brought in Colson, I can't think of this ever happening. It is a nice dream. That Cal repeatedly hires such bad coaches is exasperating.SFCityBear said:
Do you think it is too early to bring in an assistant who can coach offense, like a Gary Colson? Right now our offense is total chaos, with players trying wildly to create their own shots, and not looking for an open man, and turning the ball over at a high rate. Cal had 17 buckets on a paltry 3 assists, while Stanford had 25 buckets on 14 assists which is very good. 3 assists for an entire basketball game is pathetic.
I am not concerned with offensive stats. I would like to see purposeful activity and action away from the ball so that when Cal inevitably gets better talent, they will succeed. I don't see that. I do see much too much dribbling.
Sluggo
I look at stats a lot, because they can tell us things we might miss just watching the game, or they might support or disprove the opinion I formed while watching the game. We have the double whammy - we look bad, and we have bad stats, and that equals beaucoup losses.
The problem at the moment is that we are getting worse, not improving at the moment. 3 assists is our low mark for the season. We average 9 assists per game which ranks us #345 in the country out of 350 D1 teams, so when you only get 3 assists in a game, that is really awful, and you are almost guaranteed not to win any games like that. 3 assists means we are not finding players for open shots, we are not penetrating and dishing. I mean Jason Kidd already had 3 assists by himself while lacing up his sneakers in the locker room before a game. We have a point guard, Austin, who was barely adequate last season, with 4 assists per game, and this season he is averaging less than 2 per game. Brown, our supposed hope for the future, also averages less than 2 assists. We had 12 assists against St Marys, and looked decent in that game. In the next game against BC, we had 10. Against Harvard, we had 6, and against Stanford, we had only 3. Is this a trend? And why is Austin playing worse than last season. I suspect Fox's offense is either hard to learn, or hardly even exists, like Cuonzo's offense. Hand the ball to the players and tell'em, "Go play."
If you want them to stop dribbling, you have to tell them to move more, work hard to get open. You have to run pick and rolls, and other simple 2-man plays. Tell them not to play hero ball and shoot whenever they get the ball. That is what it looks like out there, nervous chaos and hero ball. And I would slow the pace, because the fast pace is causing many of the turnovers. We make 14 TOs per game. 18 against Stanford. If the players are not all-stars, then a slower pace is better. And not just in transistion. We run our half-court sets too fast also, IMO. I know slower basketball is ugly for many fans here, but do we want to play better and maybe win some games or look pretty losing? Right now, we are doing neither.
Random question: Does anyone think in the 2 days he spent debating who to hire that Knowlton looked at any film of the coaching candidates' teams in action. You got a search firm. I'd tell them I want video of the candidates' three best and worst games of the last two years.
By the way, I'm sure the answer is no.
Personally, if I'm an athletic director I don't give a damn how well a coach shmoozed me in the interview
I have watched Cal basketball since the Campanelli era. If we exclude recruiting, there has only been one above average coach (Montgomery) and six (Campy, Bozeman, Braun, Martin, Jones, Fox) below average coaches. It is not so damn hard. Go to a program that has good player development and in-game coaching and take the top assistant. They don't charge much because they want a head coaching gig and you get someone who is good at basketball coaching. Maybe I should start a search firm.
Sluggo