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Dismal First Half Dooms Bears Again in 107-84 Loss to UCLA

January 6, 2018
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Maybe Cal should petition the NCAA to play the rest of its games on the road.

The Bears suffered yet another embarrassing home loss, this time at the hands of UCLA. The Bruins jumped out to a 54-33 halftime lead and never looked back, cruising to a 107-84 win at Haas Pavilion Saturday afternoon.

It was Cal's third straight double digit home loss, and sixth overall in 10 games in Berkeley this season. Contrast that with the Bears' 3-0 road record, which includes wins over Stanford and San Diego State.

"I think our guys enjoy being the underdog and being the villain on the road," said head coach Wyking Jones. "I've coached teams like that before, which play well on the road and enjoy the boos and silencing the crowd. I think they feed off that, for whatever reason."

Cal's defense Saturday was dreadful from the start. The Bears allowed wide open shot after wide open shot, and UCLA (12-4, 3-1) finished at 58 percent from the field, including a blazing 17-of-30 from three-point range. Senior Thomas Welsh led the way with 19 points on 6-of-9 shooting, including 4-for-6 from beyond the arc. He was one of six Bruins in double figures.

"They're a great team," said senior Marcus Lee, who recorded his fifth double-double with 19 points and a career-high 15 rebounds. "They can shoot from all five positions. That's really hard to defend because you have to spread out wider and then still play help defense. They played that really well and worked to their strengths."

"They're talented," added Jones. "We pressed them and they took the shots we wanted them to take. The problem was they made them."

The biggest concern for Cal (7-9, 1-2) right now - and there are many - has to be the awful starts. In their last four games, the Bears have been outscored in the first half by an average of 47-29. Needless to say, that is not a recipe for success.

"I'm looking for the answer to that," Jones admitted. "I'm going into the game feeling great, knowing we had a great week of practice and feeling really good about it. And then we have a slow start and I'm shaking my head as well. ... Our guys just have to do a better job of coming out of the gates ready to throw the first punch."

"I think we just need to come out fired up," added Lee. "We come out in the second half fired up with energy after the game settles in, but we have to do that in the first half. We have to throw the first punch instead of sitting back and waiting for it."

"It's frustrating for all of us on the team," said freshman Justice Sueing, who scored a game-high 22 points. "But we're working to fix that, and we need to fix it sooner than later."

Cal will try to bounce back Thursday night against Washington. Fortunately, that game is in Seattle.

Discussion from...

Dismal First Half Dooms Bears Again in 107-84 Loss to UCLA

24,584 Views | 40 Replies | Last: 6 yr ago by Jeff82
bross
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Story updated with quotes from Jones, Lee, and Sueing.
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ncbears
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So at the next home game, the fans need to boo the Bears and taunt them like it was a road game?
TheSouseFamily
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Did Wyking really say "they took the shots we wanted them to take"?? UCLA had wide open 3 point jumpers all game. And I mean WIDE open. 17 of 30 from 3 requires lots of open looks. Is our defensive strategy really geared toward allowing wide open 3s? Please tell me that's not the case. Seriously, does Wyking actually think we played good defense tonight?
MB Cal Golf
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I guess 107 points is good defense
OneKeg
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TheSouseFamily said:

Did Wyking really say "they took the shots we wanted them to take"?? UCLA had wide open 3 point jumpers all game. And I mean WIDE open. 17 of 30 from 3 requires lots of open looks. Is our defensive strategy really geared toward allowing wide open 3s? Please tell me that's not the case. Seriously, does Wyking actually think we played good defense tonight?
Yes, that statement really stood out to me as puzzling.

UCLA could get wide open, catch-and-shoot, in-rhythm, comfort-zone 3 pointers almost any time they wanted to. How could those be the shots we wanted them to take?

I mean sure, they could have missed them. Just like sure, you could stay on a 16 against a 10 in blackjack and maybe have it work out.

Edited to add: on a completely different but also frustrating note, I think we missed 4 front-ends of 1-and-1s today. Which is hard to do considering the maximum number of 1-and-1s a team can possibly have in the whole game is 6 (and often there are fewer if one of team fouls 7 through 9 in a half are shooting or offensive). Not that it would have made much of a difference if we had made them...

Well, at least Justice was fun to watch on offense today.

Go Bears?
wifeisafurd
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TheSouseFamily said:

Did Wyking really say "they took the shots we wanted them to take"?? UCLA had wide open 3 point jumpers all game. And I mean WIDE open. 17 of 30 from 3 requires lots of open looks. Is our defensive strategy really geared toward allowing wide open 3s? Please tell me that's not the case. Seriously, does Wyking actually think we played good defense tonight?
Cal basketball, taking defense to a whole new level - signed Sonny Dykes.
helltopay1
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our press was going to allow their bigs to have open looks. Usually, either blogs turn down those shots, or they usually do not convert them. so, we played thge odds. sometimes, the odds turn against you. ( Blogs should read Bigs) Next year, out talent will match up much better. More depth, more maturity and maybe even a guy named Brown.
EricBear
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Staff
Right. Wanted their 4s and 5s to take 3s. Unfortunately, their bigs can shoot (although they were particularly hot today, helped they were wide open).

Full quotes:




HoopDreams
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Welsh was automatic from 15 last year so we knew he can shoot, and I knew he started shooting 3s this year, but he was on fire from deep. Really put us in a hole, and the 3 point barrage kept ucla comfortably ahead overtime it felt like Cal was making some noise.

When Lee is playing, we usually played a 3-2 zone defense, but we mixed it up with different zones when King was in.
UCLA was defending us mostly with a 3-2 defense.

by the way, neither team used many off ball screens. again, because both teams played zone most of the time.

McNeil penetrated more this game than in the past, and when he did so good things happen. He needs to finish better, but it's a good sign he can get deep into the paint. He also had a pretty bounce pass assist to Lee. Perhaps McNeil's best PG play of the season.

Another showcase for Sueing. He has a real good hesitation move, and can score in creative ways around the hoops using jelly shots. Extremely savvy and effective around the basket. He shot from deep really well today, which is a little surprising given his shooting form.

I've said many times, I like Dyson's potential. He might not yet be 100%, but more than that he's a freshmen that is still adjusting to the college level speed, size and athletism. Good news is he passes better than I expected and was able to drive and finish (which is his game). He also has quick hands on defense. He's the kind of athlete we need in conference.

I love having Lee on our team. He had some great blocks, and a ton of rebounds. Still not polished offensively, but he's such an athlete that he gets dunks, ally oops, and put backs. Again, our MVP.

Winston needs to make those easy layups. Maybe thinking he's going to get his shot blocked so not going up strong.

Cal didn't have any turnovers off of ucla's 3/4 press which is progress. They did have two turnovers when Hand jumped the passing lane. Gotta clean that up, especially against UW. Gotta burn their over aggressiveness. Nice to see that our press did result in some turnovers. Some progress.

Pac refs continue to be frustrating. Calling ticky tak fouls that have no impact on the player, yet not calling ucla for when he obviously fouled coleman when he stole the ball and scored. Another play when the refs did call ucla player for a foul, but they didn't count as an and-one. 7 foot Welsh is text book in the paint defensively. He goes straight up and rarely fouls.

We are leaving way to many points on the FT line, especially today missing four 1and1s. We should have had at least 6-8 more points from the FT line, and if we did, we would have been in single digits for a lot of the second half. That changes the dynamics of the game.

I think this game was more that ucla played well, although that's partly due to Cal's continued poor defense. Offensively we had another slow start but ended up with 84 points.

KoreAmBear
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Good assessment.

That 5 minute stretch of pressing (led by JHD) where we got it to 11 provided what I think could be our thing in the further. UCLA looked really confused, but we ran out of gas. Will this be sustainable going forward? Right now it seems to hurt more than help.

JHD is perfect for Wyking's style but needs to get bigger and stronger to make an impact on O.

McNeill looks like he can be a 3 Point sharp shooter like Theo. Too bad Theo can't coach him.

Sueing kind of reminds me of SLO Mo Anderson from UCLA who varied his pace to be effective rather than out quick or out athlete everyone.

south bender
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WK's decision to take H-D out early in second half when he picked up his 4th foul, to me, was a bad mistake. Juwan was igniting the defense, and the Bears were then seriously closing the gap.

Once he went out, the Bruins steadily built their lead to where putting H-D back with 5 minutes left was at that point meaningless.

Of course, keeping him in after his 4th foul was a big risk, likely to fail, but his benching turned the game and eliminated any chance we had.
wifeisafurd
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helltopay1 said:

our press was going to allow their bigs to have open looks. Usually, either blogs turn down those shots, or they usually do not convert them. so, we played thge odds. sometimes, the odds turn against you. ( Blogs should read Bigs) Next year, out talent will match up much better. More depth, more maturity and maybe even a guy named Brown.
That may be true on the offensive side, and certainly more depth is needed for up tempo. But again, I'm not seeing defensive fundamentals, either on an individual basis or with team defense. And a mobile big like Brown doesn't really cure that. We have that in Lee already. I don't see Jones having the coaching chops in this area, but that is okay. Plenty of HC's who are primarily recruiters. Get staff that can teach defense if Jones is to be retained.
roqmoq
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ncbears said:

So at the next home game, the fans need to boo the Bears and taunt them like it was a road game?
How about this strategy? Let's start the game 20 pts. behind. Then, the opposition will get complacent and our guys will play with more abandon. After getting behind by 20 pts., we played them pretty evenly for the remainder of the game. Or at least, the deficit stayed around the 20 pt. mark.
6956bear
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wifeisafurd said:

helltopay1 said:

our press was going to allow their bigs to have open looks. Usually, either blogs turn down those shots, or they usually do not convert them. so, we played thge odds. sometimes, the odds turn against you. ( Blogs should read Bigs) Next year, out talent will match up much better. More depth, more maturity and maybe even a guy named Brown.
That may be true on the offensive side, and certainly more depth is needed for up tempo. But again, I'm not seeing defensive fundamentals, either on an individual basis or with team defense. And a mobile big like Brown doesn't really cure that. We have that in Lee already. I don't see Jones having the coaching chops in this area, but that is okay. Plenty of HC's who are primarily recruiters. Get staff that can teach defense if Jones is to be retained.
There have been several occasions this season where the TV analysts have chosen to take this group to task for their absolute disinterest in playing hard on defense. Dakich did it in Hawaii and Monty and now McLean this weekend. I understand young teams making rotation mistakes etc, but not playing hard is completely inexcusable. Until this team decides it is going to play hard for 40 minutes they will continue to get blown out.

TV analysts generally want to give young players the benefit of the doubt. But it is very clear that effort is missing from the Bears. The first half of these past 2 games were really hard to understand. They have some clear personnel concerns that may be addressed with the next recruiting class and when Austin is eligible to have a real PG. But this year was to be a "culture" creating year. Unfortunately the culture being established is poor effort, poor body language and a disdain for defense generally.

I can accept the losing knowing the personnel on hand if they play hard and make strides. Unfortunately I see an ongoing pattern of disinterest in defense and a lack of effort generally. They had a few moments yesterday and Thursday where they played hard, but only in small windows of time and well after the game had been decided.

They gave up over 50pts in each half yesterday. 107 for the game. Really? While some of that is strategy some of that is just plain lack of effort.
HoopDreams
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wifeisafurd said:

helltopay1 said:

our press was going to allow their bigs to have open looks. Usually, either blogs turn down those shots, or they usually do not convert them. so, we played thge odds. sometimes, the odds turn against you. ( Blogs should read Bigs) Next year, out talent will match up much better. More depth, more maturity and maybe even a guy named Brown.
That may be true on the offensive side, and certainly more depth is needed for up tempo. But again, I'm not seeing defensive fundamentals, either on an individual basis or with team defense. And a mobile big like Brown doesn't really cure that. We have that in Lee already. I don't see Jones having the coaching chops in this area, but that is okay. Plenty of HC's who are primarily recruiters. Get staff that can teach defense if Jones is to be retained.
agree our defense is a problem, but it's also true it's tough with so many freshmen. Jabari Bird is a good example... athletic, talent, size ... but played terrible defense as a freshmen.
TheSouseFamily
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HoopDreams said:

wifeisafurd said:

helltopay1 said:

our press was going to allow their bigs to have open looks. Usually, either blogs turn down those shots, or they usually do not convert them. so, we played thge odds. sometimes, the odds turn against you. ( Blogs should read Bigs) Next year, out talent will match up much better. More depth, more maturity and maybe even a guy named Brown.
That may be true on the offensive side, and certainly more depth is needed for up tempo. But again, I'm not seeing defensive fundamentals, either on an individual basis or with team defense. And a mobile big like Brown doesn't really cure that. We have that in Lee already. I don't see Jones having the coaching chops in this area, but that is okay. Plenty of HC's who are primarily recruiters. Get staff that can teach defense if Jones is to be retained.
agree our defense is a problem, but it's also true it's tough with so many freshmen. Jabari Bird is a good example... athletic, talent, size ... but played terrible defense as a freshmen.


Agree that youth and defense often don't mix well. But Coleman is a junior and he's the worst defender on the team. That one is a little harder to figure out.
helltopay1
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when we play man defense, our intensity picks up. We seem disinterested because we play a porous zone.
helltopay1
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Next year, because we will have far more depth, look for us to play primarily man defense. Nobody is disinterested in man-to-man combat.
bross
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I also found the "they took the shots we wanted them to take" statement troubling. Wyking's point was that, in general, you want your opponent's big men shooting 3s. But UCLA's big men can shoot the lights out. Giving them wide open looks was not a good strategy. Especially when they proved they can hit them early.
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Econ141
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bross said:

I also found the "they took the shots we wanted them to take" statement troubling. Wyking's point was that, in general, you want your opponent's big men shooting 3s. But UCLA's big men can shoot the lights out. Giving them wide open looks was not a good strategy. Especially when they proved they can hit them early.


What is even more troubling is that this shows basically zero skill in game preparation and planning. Based on watching UCLA last year on tv I could have told Wyqueen Jones that ucla's bigs can shoot, Welsh in particular. And I didn't have to watch hours of film to know that.
UrsaMajor
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fat_slice said:

bross said:

I also found the "they took the shots we wanted them to take" statement troubling. Wyking's point was that, in general, you want your opponent's big men shooting 3s. But UCLA's big men can shoot the lights out. Giving them wide open looks was not a good strategy. Especially when they proved they can hit them early.


What is even more troubling is that this shows basically zero skill in game preparation and planning. Based on watching UCLA last year on tv I could have told Wyqueen Jones that ucla's bigs can shoot, Welsh in particular. And I didn't have to watch hours of film to know that.
Do you actually believe making fun of someone's name--and managing to do so in a sexist manner to boot qualifies as intelligent commentary?
Civil Bear
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fat_slice said:

bross said:

I also found the "they took the shots we wanted them to take" statement troubling. Wyking's point was that, in general, you want your opponent's big men shooting 3s. But UCLA's big men can shoot the lights out. Giving them wide open looks was not a good strategy. Especially when they proved they can hit them early.


What is even more troubling is that this shows basically zero skill in game preparation and planning. Based on watching UCLA last year on tv I could have told Wyqueen Jones that ucla's bigs can shoot, Welsh in particular. And I didn't have to watch hours of film to know that.
Don't know what to say to this other than Welsh attempted only one three-pointer all of last year, and Olesinski wasn't on the team. Going into the Cal game this year, they were shooting a combined 32% from behind the arc.
socaliganbear
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bross said:

I also found the "they took the shots we wanted them to take" statement troubling. Wyking's point was that, in general, you want your opponent's big men shooting 3s. But UCLA's big men can shoot the lights out. Giving them wide open looks was not a good strategy. Especially when they proved they can hit them early.
This was my take. If your strategy is let their skilled shooters who are bigs take shots, well then that doesn't seem like much of a strategy.
wifeisafurd
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HoopDreams said:

wifeisafurd said:

helltopay1 said:

our press was going to allow their bigs to have open looks. Usually, either blogs turn down those shots, or they usually do not convert them. so, we played thge odds. sometimes, the odds turn against you. ( Blogs should read Bigs) Next year, out talent will match up much better. More depth, more maturity and maybe even a guy named Brown.
That may be true on the offensive side, and certainly more depth is needed for up tempo. But again, I'm not seeing defensive fundamentals, either on an individual basis or with team defense. And a mobile big like Brown doesn't really cure that. We have that in Lee already. I don't see Jones having the coaching chops in this area, but that is okay. Plenty of HC's who are primarily recruiters. Get staff that can teach defense if Jones is to be retained.
agree our defense is a problem, but it's also true it's tough with so many freshmen. Jabari Bird is a good example... athletic, talent, size ... but played terrible defense as a freshmen.
Agreed, and we will be playing defense with inexperienced (mostly frosh) bigs next year. Thus, the need for more focus this year.
wifeisafurd
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helltopay1 said:

Next year, because we will have far more depth, look for us to play primarily man defense. Nobody is disinterested in man-to-man combat.
I'm not seeing much more depth on the team next year, than this year. For example, if Brown goes elsewhere, we start relatively small frosh players at the 1 and 2, with who exactly at back-ups?
concordtom
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wifeisafurd said:

helltopay1 said:

Next year, because we will have far more depth, look for us to play primarily man defense. Nobody is disinterested in man-to-man combat.
I'm not seeing much more depth on the team next year, than this year. For example, if Brown goes elsewhere, we start relatively small frosh players at the 1 and 2, with who exactly at back-ups?
I don't understand you, Wife.

Paris will be a 4th year Junior.
McNeil will be a Sophomore.
Those are our 1's.

At the 2, we've got:
Senior Coleman
Junior JHD
Freshman Bradley

Anyways, it's okay...
wifeisafurd
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concordtom said:

wifeisafurd said:

helltopay1 said:

Next year, because we will have far more depth, look for us to play primarily man defense. Nobody is disinterested in man-to-man combat.
I'm not seeing much more depth on the team next year, than this year. For example, if Brown goes elsewhere, we start relatively small frosh players at the 1 and 2, with who exactly at back-ups?
I don't understand you, Wife.

Paris will be a 4th year Junior.
McNeil will be a Sophomore.
Those are our 1's.

At the 2, we've got:
Senior Coleman
Junior JHD
Freshman Bradley

Anyways, it's okay...
Feel like the guy in the Airplane movie. Must have picked a bad day to give-up......

Meant small at 5 and 4. We have depth at 1-3. I see Kelly or Anticevich as a very small 5 and one of the wings as the 4 and ???
sluggo
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helltopay1 said:

Next year, because we will have far more depth, look for us to play primarily man defense. Nobody is disinterested in man-to-man combat.
I see next year as 40 minutes of full court press. They are going to have to speed up the game to cover for a lack of size.

Sluggo
Econ141
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Civil Bear said:

fat_slice said:

bross said:

I also found the "they took the shots we wanted them to take" statement troubling. Wyking's point was that, in general, you want your opponent's big men shooting 3s. But UCLA's big men can shoot the lights out. Giving them wide open looks was not a good strategy. Especially when they proved they can hit them early.


What is even more troubling is that this shows basically zero skill in game preparation and planning. Based on watching UCLA last year on tv I could have told Wyqueen Jones that ucla's bigs can shoot, Welsh in particular. And I didn't have to watch hours of film to know that.
Don't know what to say to this other than Welsh attempted only one three-pointer all of last year, and Olesinski wasn't on the team. Going into the Cal game this year, they were shooting a combined 32% from behind the arc.


Good point and I'm actually surprised by that stat! That said, his mid range game last year was great so I knew he was a good shooter. Good enough that we don't just keep letting him shoot open threes.
6956bear
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Civil Bear said:

fat_slice said:

bross said:

I also found the "they took the shots we wanted them to take" statement troubling. Wyking's point was that, in general, you want your opponent's big men shooting 3s. But UCLA's big men can shoot the lights out. Giving them wide open looks was not a good strategy. Especially when they proved they can hit them early.


What is even more troubling is that this shows basically zero skill in game preparation and planning. Based on watching UCLA last year on tv I could have told Wyqueen Jones that ucla's bigs can shoot, Welsh in particular. And I didn't have to watch hours of film to know that.
Don't know what to say to this other than Welsh attempted only one three-pointer all of last year, and Olesinski wasn't on the team. Going into the Cal game this year, they were shooting a combined 32% from behind the arc.
True enough that their stats suggest medicore 3 pt shooting ability. Doubtful though other teams left them as wide open as Cal did all game long. Once they showed an ability to make them when open, you would think they would consider changing the approach. But alas that would be no.
OdontoBear66
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6956bear said:

Civil Bear said:

fat_slice said:

bross said:

I also found the "they took the shots we wanted them to take" statement troubling. Wyking's point was that, in general, you want your opponent's big men shooting 3s. But UCLA's big men can shoot the lights out. Giving them wide open looks was not a good strategy. Especially when they proved they can hit them early.


What is even more troubling is that this shows basically zero skill in game preparation and planning. Based on watching UCLA last year on tv I could have told Wyqueen Jones that ucla's bigs can shoot, Welsh in particular. And I didn't have to watch hours of film to know that.
Don't know what to say to this other than Welsh attempted only one three-pointer all of last year, and Olesinski wasn't on the team. Going into the Cal game this year, they were shooting a combined 32% from behind the arc.
True enough that their stats suggest medicore 3 pt shooting ability. Doubtful though other teams left them as wide open as Cal did all game long. Once they showed an ability to make them when open, you would think they would consider changing the approach. But alas that would be no.
I wonder how we would shoot the 3 ball if left wide open when we don't shoot it well now. My guess is not as good as Welsh and Olesinski---somehow strange things happen to the greatness of players when they play Cal.
Jeff82
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Jones is a bit stuck between trying to install his system for the long haul, and what might make us marginally more competitive in the short-term. We looked better in the press on Saturday, which allowed us to make a run and get back in the game, but when we gave up open looks in it, they went to Welsh and Olesinski, who converted. Would we be better off playing exclusively man? Maybe, although I don't know that we have anyone who can defend the other team's point guard consistently at the point of attack, so that just sets up a different set of problems.

I felt slightly better after Saturday than after Thursday, where I felt U$C hit us in the mouth early, and we just folded. Against the Ruins, we got up and tried to punch back. Still going to be a long season due to our lack of consistent shooting, or a point guard.
UrsaMajor
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Jeff82 said:

Jones is a bit stuck between trying to install his system for the long haul, and what might make us marginally more competitive in the short-term. We looked better in the press on Saturday, which allowed us to make a run and get back in the game, but when we gave up open looks in it, they went to Welsh and Olesinski, who converted. Would we be better off playing exclusively man? Maybe, although I don't know that we have anyone who can defend the other team's point guard consistently at the point of attack, so that just sets up a different set of problems.

I felt slightly better after Saturday than after Thursday, where I felt U$C hit us in the mouth early, and we just folded. Against the Ruins, we got up and tried to punch back. Still going to be a long season due to our lack of consistent shooting, or a point guard.
Good analysis. SFCity has pointed out that with a young team such as this, you need to simplify defense until they get one defense (he prefers man) down. At the same time, being able to switch from man to zone or zone to man seems important. We beat Stanfurd in large part because of the switch to man defense. Against UCLA, the situation was crying for that--even if only for a few minutes to force them out of the rhythm on their 3's. I also agree with SFCity that the lack of fundamentals is dooming any defense we try.
Big C
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UrsaMajor said:

Jeff82 said:

Jones is a bit stuck between trying to install his system for the long haul, and what might make us marginally more competitive in the short-term. We looked better in the press on Saturday, which allowed us to make a run and get back in the game, but when we gave up open looks in it, they went to Welsh and Olesinski, who converted. Would we be better off playing exclusively man? Maybe, although I don't know that we have anyone who can defend the other team's point guard consistently at the point of attack, so that just sets up a different set of problems.

I felt slightly better after Saturday than after Thursday, where I felt U$C hit us in the mouth early, and we just folded. Against the Ruins, we got up and tried to punch back. Still going to be a long season due to our lack of consistent shooting, or a point guard.
Good analysis. SFCity has pointed out that with a young team such as this, you need to simplify defense until they get one defense (he prefers man) down. At the same time, being able to switch from man to zone or zone to man seems important. We beat Stanfurd in large part because of the switch to man defense. Against UCLA, the situation was crying for that--even if only for a few minutes to force them out of the rhythm on their 3's. I also agree with SFCity that the lack of fundamentals is dooming any defense we try.
As far as I know, the majority of good coaches start out with a tough, fundamentally-sound man-to-man defense, then add from there.

The fan base tends to drool when a coach comes in and says he's going to run and press, but it's not always the winning option. Cal Basketball 2017-18 kinda comes to mind as the classic example.

IMO, a zone defense usually works better as a change of pace. There's a misconception that zone is "easier" to play, but to do it well is trickier than it looks. Again, look at this year's team.

Maybe this season should've been spent teaching the younger players man-to-man fundamentals. I wonder what Coach is thinking about doing, going into the next ten months? Does he know what he doesn't know? Who does he turn to for advice?
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