calumnus said:
Intuit said:
Your self indulgent gotcha post reiterates the better statistical teams have better talent and execute the strategy at a more effect clip. We new that already.
Assuming this is addressed to me, yes I like discussing strategy, so yes, maybe posting here is self-indulgent. Where else can someone go to discuss Cal basketball?
"We knew that already"? My post was in direct response to someone saying we improved because we emphasized defense last year. My point is that we did not. We played bad defense but slowed down play. This was a characteristic of Cal play under Braun (but we would debate it here incessantly). For a talent deficient team that is a better strategy than speeding up the game and getting blown out (which is what Jones did). However, that is a one time change to mitigate being the lesser team. You cannot slow the ball down into being a good team. At some point you need to play good offense and/or defense. When you are the better team you may even (generally should) speed up play. However, Virginia is a rare counter example of a good team that slows the ball down and plays good defense to win. As SF City will tell you, Newell's teams were similar. Hopefully Fox is taking us in one of those two directions.
I agree with most of what you wrote. I'd like to back up what you said about Newell's teams, but based on Newell's comments, I think he may have felt a little differently. I don't believe pace or tempo were objectives for him. He taught his defenses to be very aggressive and stop opposing players from reaching the spots on the floor which their plays required for them to do to get open shots. Moving opposing players around the floor, preventing them from doing what they wanted to do, naturally slowed them down, causing them to take more time to get a shot off.
On offense, Newell schemed for each opponent, and each opposing player, and taught his players to run their own plays to perfection, so his teams usually got their shots off pretty quickly, compared to his opponents. He did not have many very good shooters, but his plays created a lot of wide open shots, especially layups or other shots inside 10 feet. Newell was in favor of the shot clock, and lobbied the NCAA for it, but it was not installed until years after he had retired from coaching. He liked the shot clock, because he felt his teams were so disciplined, they could get an open shot off way before the shot clock ran out, and his defenses would make it hard for his opponents to get shot off before, let alone get off a high percentage shot. I think Newell might have liked to fastbreak, but he never had the horses. His best teams averaged around 64 points, while holding opponents to 50 points, and while it is not valid to compare teams of different eras, that was a larger margin of victory than Virginia had last season. His teams played all their games at the same pace or tempo, as far as I could remember. I don't think Newell ever slowed his offense down, except at the end of a close game to run clock.