Opponents' O got better.
The Valley was filled with, let's call them corn-fed farm boys from Iowa who could nail 3's. There was Paris Lee, who could get to the hoop, but wasn't someone who had to be guarded real close on the perimeter.
There wasn't much film from last year that showed the weakness of the Shox D. Trae Young provided that film this year. The AAC is filled with guards who can penetrate and can hit from 3. It's also filled with 3's and 4's who can hit jumpers and drive to the hoop.
Once opponents figured out they could drive past our perimeter D, the D was doomed. The D didn't get worse, it got exposed. It's a little like SHJ. Against Arkansas State, he was awesome. Against better competition, he was exposed.
The knock on Shamet from NBA scouts is that he can't guard the perimeter. Reaves and Frankamp aren't quick enough to cover the perimeter guys who drive in the AAC. Brown isn't an elite defender against players with handles who are quicker than he is. He didn't run into any of those (other than possibly Lee) in the Valley.
A caller to the post-game show went on and on about why the Shox never pressure opposing guards beyond the 3-point line like opponents pressure WSU's guards deep. The answer is pretty simple. If WSU's perimeter guards apply pressure deep, opponents will drive past them into the lane and then the big guys get into foul problems. Leave perimeter guys uncovered out to 25' or so in the AAC and they hit 3's like they're layup drills. WSU's guards get pressured deep because they aren't threats to drive into the paint.
The Shox D faced a decision. Give up points in the paint and get post players (Morris) into foul trouble, or cheat perimeter defenders into the lane to slow down penetration and leave perimeter players unguarded. The choice was sort of like choosing which you'd rather have bite you, an alligator or a crocodile.
The Valley was filled with, let's call them corn-fed farm boys from Iowa who could nail 3's. There was Paris Lee, who could get to the hoop, but wasn't someone who had to be guarded real close on the perimeter.
There wasn't much film from last year that showed the weakness of the Shox D. Trae Young provided that film this year. The AAC is filled with guards who can penetrate and can hit from 3. It's also filled with 3's and 4's who can hit jumpers and drive to the hoop.
Once opponents figured out they could drive past our perimeter D, the D was doomed. The D didn't get worse, it got exposed. It's a little like SHJ. Against Arkansas State, he was awesome. Against better competition, he was exposed.
The knock on Shamet from NBA scouts is that he can't guard the perimeter. Reaves and Frankamp aren't quick enough to cover the perimeter guys who drive in the AAC. Brown isn't an elite defender against players with handles who are quicker than he is. He didn't run into any of those (other than possibly Lee) in the Valley.
A caller to the post-game show went on and on about why the Shox never pressure opposing guards beyond the 3-point line like opponents pressure WSU's guards deep. The answer is pretty simple. If WSU's perimeter guards apply pressure deep, opponents will drive past them into the lane and then the big guys get into foul problems. Leave perimeter guys uncovered out to 25' or so in the AAC and they hit 3's like they're layup drills. WSU's guards get pressured deep because they aren't threats to drive into the paint.
The Shox D faced a decision. Give up points in the paint and get post players (Morris) into foul trouble, or cheat perimeter defenders into the lane to slow down penetration and leave perimeter players unguarded. The choice was sort of like choosing which you'd rather have bite you, an alligator or a crocodile.
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