BeachedBear said:
sluggo said:
Other than the on ball screens set at poor angles, I have no idea what Cal is trying to do on offense. They play offense like a bunch of guys who have never met each other. Awful coaching. At Georgia Fox had bad offenses, so this is no surprise. So frustrating to watch.
From observation, they appear to be mixing up 4 out and 3 out offenses, with a mix of in-n-out vs perimeter ball movement. From a coaching perspective, I think this is a good strategy with the matchups we've seen. They also appear to be maximizing transition opportunities.
However, what 'appears' and how it is executed has a lot to be desired. Too many turnovers, insufficient rebounding, mediocre shooting (I don't think shooting is their biggest problem at this stage - but its not great), poor passing and, as you noted weak screens. The passing is probably the biggest challenge at this stage of the season and is exacerbated by lineup changes due to injuries. A couple great examples are Lars and Betley. When Lars gets passes near his face and doesn't drop it, (because he wasn't ready) he looks pretty good. Similarly, when Betley gets a pass near his shins two feet to his right, when he is covered - makes him look bad. he's a spot up shooter. He needs the ball in his chest when he's open to maximize his quicker release.
I think the staff needs to focus on more of the execution than the design. But yeah - its on the staff and if this was happening at Georgia - probably means it is less likely to improve.
Braun's team had decent execution, but poor design IMHO. Cuonzo had mediocre execution and weak design (on offense) IMHO. Jones had poor design and poor execution (in everyone's opinion, it seems).
Monty had good design and close to great execution. I think that is because he adjusted his scheme and shot selection to suit his individual players assets (in particular Kamp, Boykin, Thurman and Sanders-Frison, but also Crabbe and Theo and Christopher on the perimeter). Dissecting it a little more compare Boykin vs Thurman and how Monty maximized their 8 foot game. Boykin was able to shoot with movement, but not contact - so Monty had him work a little curl or back screen above the post to great effect. Thurman, on the other hand shot better with contact, so the other post player would NOT back screen, but look for sneak pass and layup. That seems like an easy thing to duplicate, but few coaches can do that. I have heard other top coaches point out that Monty's methodology was actually a weakness come tourney time as his teams were very 'scoutable' - but wouldn't we love to have that problem!?!
Thank you for some substance! I agree that the staff needs to focus on execution. I agree with your summaries of previous coaches. I think Monty's problem in the tournament was that his teams were over-seeded because they overachieved during the regular season. After a long, grueling season, the tournament favors teams that still have legs, that is, the teams with the best athletes, and Monty rarely had them.
I re-watched the first half of the game against WSU to see what Cal was doing and to see whether I was full of it. You mention the sets that Cal uses, but when I say I don't know what they are doing, it means I don't know where they think the shots are going to come from if it works. Like with the Braun offense they tried to overload a side and get a ball reversal so the post could pin their defender and thus be easily fed and also single teamed. It was beyond weak, but I knew what I was seeing. Upon a second viewing I
still don't know what Cal is trying to do.
Offense is based on spacing, movement and screening. I would give Cal an A on spacing. This leads to open driving lanes, which Brown took advantage of (he had a great half) and Bradley usually does, and open 3 point shots. Too many of those shots were from NBA range, but on the other hand, the farther players are out, the better the spacing.
I would give Cal a C on movement. There is a lot of movement. But it is not very productive movement and it never includes backdoor cutting. Cutting is alway towards the ball or towards the three point line. Kelly nicely ducked in a couple times from the baseline, and with the good spacing, it led to two short shots, one of which he made. Now he could fake the duck in and go back door for a lob, but that would be on another team.
Cal definitely deserves an F on screening, but that is only because I don't give lower than an F. I counted 4 off ball screens. Two by Grant A., one by KK, and one by Lars T. Lars T. set a beautiful screen on the foul line extended to free Betley for a successful 3 on the first play of the game. Such a nice play was never repeated, so I am going to guess this sequence was drawn up before the game started. There were lots of on ball screens, but either the screener was out of place or the dribbler did not set up the screener properly. This is pure coaching. Kelly is a good player, but he is a particularly bad screener. When he is off the ball he does this thing where he fakes like he is going to screen but never follows through. He is also the worst on ball screener among the bigs. At least Lars T. tries here.
Cal's offense seems to be read and react. I would like something more patterned. I think it would be easier on the players, many of whom do not have great basketball instincts. Brown stands out because he has amazing instincts, he is a poor man's Rajon Rondo, but he can't follow through on what he can see because his skills are poor. I doubt he will ever be able to shoot from distance, but if he could finish from within 5 feet, it would be very helpful.
Cal needs a talent upgrade, but they are never going to have the players to be very good with such poor execution. This weak execution is just like last year, and it will be the same next year. It is coaching.