If we're a 1 seed, I really don't care what happens in the conference tournament. We would've done enough damage by then that we're not dropping below a 4 seed. Works for me.
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WSU vs SMU Game Thread
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Getting back to the defense....
I'm not espousing that WSU is a Top 20 defensive team, but some food for thought before you commence wrist-slashing:
Prior to the game vs. WSU, Landrum/Douglas/Whitt/Agau were a combined 24/104 (23.1%!!!!!) from 3. None were above 25%.
During the game vs. WSU, Landrum/Douglas/Whitt/Agau were a combined 7-12 (58.3%) from 3.
Now, we can discuss that WSU's defense isn't particularly stout. That's fine. We can talk about not guarding the 3PT line closely enough, or ending up behind the play on help and giving up open 3s. That's fair. We can say poor defense leads to higher shooting percentages than season averages. Great.
But it's also fair to point out that those 4 guys don't shoot 58% in their dreams, regardless of the defense they are facing. Additionally, noting that the group was shooting between 14% and 24% on the season with 59/29/7/9 3PA, respectively, it's probably fair to think that chasing these guys off the 3PT line was specifically NOT a part of the scouting report, nor should it have been.Last edited by Cdizzle; February 26, 2018, 03:55 PM.
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Be prepared for both LS and MM to be gone after this year. In other words, don’t be shocked if it happens.
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Originally posted by Cdizzle View PostGetting back to the defense....
I'm not espousing that WSU is a Top 20 defensive team, but some food for thought before you commence wrist-slashing:
Prior to the game vs. WSU, Landrum/Douglas/Whitt/Agau were a combined 24/104 (23.1%!!!!!) from 3. None were above 25%.
During the game vs. WSU, Landrum/Douglas/Whitt/Agau were a combined 7-12 (58.3%) from 3.
Now, we can discuss that WSU's defense isn't particularly stout. That's fine. We can talk about not guarding the 3PT line closely enough, or ending up behind the play on help and giving up open 3s. That's fair. We can say poor defense leads to higher shooting percentages than season averages. Great.
But it's also fair to point out that those 4 guys don't shoot 58% in their dreams, regardless of the defense they are facing. Additionally, noting that the group was shooting between 14% and 24% on the season with 59/29/7/9 3PA, respectively, it's probably fair to think that chasing these guys off the 3PT line was specifically NOT a part of the scouting report, nor should it have been.
I think it's probably wishful thinking to believe they could still be a top 10 defensive team in any given game, but I have no trouble believing they could still be at least a top 30-50 defensive team in any given game. Combine that with what could be the best offensive team of HCGM's tenure, and you've got a darn good team.
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I'm not saying we're as good defensively as the past, we're not. JD listed some factors and I added one more not excluding the others.
How many times have you seen officials show arm bar or two hands on the driver as the foul call? How many times have you seen Gregg throw his hands up making a point to a player. Freedom of movement is not the only factor but it is a factor when comparing to previous teams. Personally I think failure to communicate and execution with rotation are also factors.
And don't point out two games like officiating is consistent from game to game. It's not even consistent half to half.
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If this same team, which did so well defensively last year in the MVC, was playing in the MVC this year, their defensive rating would be a lot better. So the fact that our defense seems to have dropped off this year, can mostly be the result of better competition.
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Originally posted by shoxlax View PostBe prepared for both LS and MM to be gone after this year. In other words, don’t be shocked if it happens.
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I don't see how anyone could predict MM right now -- whether he comes back or not will entirely depend on NCAA tournament performance, IMO. If he has a breakout tournament (like Early vs Kentucky), he's gone. If he's a productive but nothing outstanding sixth man, I expect him back. He was far more productive last season and wasn't ready to go pro, so I don't see how he could be predicted to go pro now without showing something new. Statistically he's regressed and added injury concerns. He needs a breakout tournament.
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Originally posted by Cdizzle View PostGetting back to the defense....
I'm not espousing that WSU is a Top 20 defensive team, but some food for thought before you commence wrist-slashing:
Prior to the game vs. WSU, Landrum/Douglas/Whitt/Agau were a combined 24/104 (23.1%!!!!!) from 3. None were above 25%.
During the game vs. WSU, Landrum/Douglas/Whitt/Agau were a combined 7-12 (58.3%) from 3.
Now, we can discuss that WSU's defense isn't particularly stout. That's fine. We can talk about not guarding the 3PT line closely enough, or ending up behind the play on help and giving up open 3s. That's fair. We can say poor defense leads to higher shooting percentages than season averages. Great.
But it's also fair to point out that those 4 guys don't shoot 58% in their dreams, regardless of the defense they are facing. Additionally, noting that the group was shooting between 14% and 24% on the season with 59/29/7/9 3PA, respectively, it's probably fair to think that chasing these guys off the 3PT line was specifically NOT a part of the scouting report, nor should it have been.
What I find interesting is, when playing against the top half of the AAC, we're holding opponents to ~5.5% less than their season average from three -- and when playing the bottom half, we're allowing opponents to score ~6% better than their season average.
That same trend seems consistent with the nonconference -- the teams that lit us up from 3 relative to season %s (Cal, San Diego St, Arizona State, and FGCU) were teams we were expected to handily beat. Yet every team that was expected to test us we held well below their season %s -- Marquette, Notre Dame, Baylor, Oklahoma St, and even Oklahoma, all shot at least 4.8% worse than their season average.
Maybe it's not so much that we're bad on defense, as selectively good on defense? It's interesting to me that not one even close to NCAA tournament team we've played this year has shot well from the perimeter against us, despite so many other teams scorching us from there. SMU's probably the only team that could have had a prayer at the tournament (if they'd stayed healthy) who shot better than their season average from 3 against us.Last edited by Rlh04d; February 26, 2018, 10:30 PM.Originally posted by BleacherReportFred VanVleet on Shockers' 3-Pt Shooting Confidence -- ' Honestly, I just tell these guys to let their nuts hang.'
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Or if you want to break opponents up into quadrants:
Quadrant 1: -8.50%
Quadrant 2: -2.18%
Quadrant 3: +9.94%
Quadrant 4: +3.37%
That's pretty glaring to me, and doesn't say bad defense so much as over-confident, maybe lazy defense. Only one quadrant one opponent (@Temple +3.5%) shot better from 3 than their season average against us -- yet every single quadrant three opponent did, as did four of six quadrant four opponents.Last edited by Rlh04d; February 26, 2018, 10:46 PM.
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And a relatively similar trend for FG% as a whole:
Quadrant 1: -3.32%
Quadrant 2: -2.21%
Quadrant 3: +2.20%
Quadrant 4: -4.63%
Only one Quadrant 1 team shot above season FG%: Cinci at +2.4%. Only three Quadrant 2 teams did, and ND wouldn't be in that category if their season % reflected the healthy team we played. Only two Quadrant 3 teams didn't: Tulsa and FGCU, who are just shy of 50% FG% overall.
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Originally posted by Rlh04d View Post
I was thinking pretty similarly to BOBB until I decided to look it up -- on the year, we've allowed our opponents to shoot almost exactly their average, all in all. If you just look at the average game to game versus their season averages, our opponents have shot .05% better than their average. If you limit it to AAC games, we're allowing our conference opponents to shoot a bit less than 1% better over their season average against us.
What I find interesting is, when playing against the top half of the AAC, we're holding opponents to ~5.5% less than their season average from three -- and when playing the bottom half, we're allowing opponents to score ~6% better than their season average.
That same trend seems consistent with the nonconference -- the teams that lit us up from 3 relative to season %s (Cal, San Diego St, Arizona State, and FGCU) were teams we were expected to handily beat. Yet every team that was expected to test us we held well below their season %s -- Marquette, Notre Dame, Baylor, Oklahoma St, and even Oklahoma, all shot at least 4.8% worse than their season average.
Maybe it's not so much that we're bad on defense, as selectively good on defense? It's interesting to me that not one even close to NCAA tournament team we've played this year has shot well from the perimeter against us, despite so many other teams scorching us from there. SMU's probably the only team that could have had a prayer at the tournament (if they'd stayed healthy) who shot better than their season average from 3 against us."It's amazing to watch Ron slide into that open area, Fred will find him and it's straight cash homie."--HCGM
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Originally posted by Rocky Mountain Shock View Post
That's usually a sign of a young, immature, inexperienced team. But we have six seniors. I don't know what to think.
I remember a comment after the Cincinnati game in the Shamet interview that the Shockers went for the win. The tone was that they typically do not go out and "win it". And I see that. A lot. The Notre Dame game was the first perfect example of waiting for the win and it burned them. This SMU game was a second example as well.
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Originally posted by boltforge View Post
Every now and then we see teams that tend to play at the level of the competition. This seems to be one of those teams.
I remember a comment after the Cincinnati game in the Shamet interview that the Shockers went for the win. The tone was that they typically do not go out and "win it". And I see that. A lot. The Notre Dame game was the first perfect example of waiting for the win and it burned them. This SMU game was a second example as well.
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Originally posted by boltforge View Post
Every now and then we see teams that tend to play at the level of the competition. This seems to be one of those teams.
I remember a comment after the Cincinnati game in the Shamet interview that the Shockers went for the win. The tone was that they typically do not go out and "win it". And I see that. A lot. The Notre Dame game was the first perfect example of waiting for the win and it burned them. This SMU game was a second example as well.Last edited by Rocky Mountain Shock; February 27, 2018, 03:18 PM."It's amazing to watch Ron slide into that open area, Fred will find him and it's straight cash homie."--HCGM
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