A transition game is exciting and fun to watch, but it's not that easy to do.
If there's a player like Terry Benton, Robert Elmore, Xavier McDaniel, Cliff Levingston or Antoine Carr on the team, you send that player to get the rebound. The other 2 frontcourt guys break down either sideline while the guards go full-speed to the basket.
That leaves 4 chances of the defense not covering someone. The guy who gets the rebound has to be able to throw anything ranging from a 10-yard pass to a 20-yard pass hitting a backcourt guy in full stride. The rebounder has to have the passing skills of a D1 scholarship QB.
If there isn't a guy on the team who gets every board, you've got to send 2 guys for the rebound. Now there's only 3 chances of a defensive breakdown and only one option for a short pass.
Turgeon sent 3 guys for rebounds, which left only a deeper, full-speed option for the outlet pass and typically Braeuer streaking to the hoop. That's why WSU's transition game seemed to be Braeuer trying to shoot over taller players at the basket.
Then there's the secondary break. A typical setup is 2 3-point guys hanging out deep and one guy trying to set up for an interior pass. The key to the secondary break is the rebounders beating the opponents down the floor to create a 5-on-4 or 5-on-3 situation.
Tall, skinny guys tend to run faster than tall, bulky guys.
If WSU has a rebounder with an arm like a QB, then Kendall Wright could be a Shocker. Marshall likes tall SG's. Wright runs a 4.4 40 and had a 39" vertical as a SO in HS. Wright is 5'11", but he's a BCS-caliber WR. He can catch the ball.
It doesn't matter how fast a player is or how high he can jump if there's no one who can throw the transition pass to him and that's difficult.
If there's a player like Terry Benton, Robert Elmore, Xavier McDaniel, Cliff Levingston or Antoine Carr on the team, you send that player to get the rebound. The other 2 frontcourt guys break down either sideline while the guards go full-speed to the basket.
That leaves 4 chances of the defense not covering someone. The guy who gets the rebound has to be able to throw anything ranging from a 10-yard pass to a 20-yard pass hitting a backcourt guy in full stride. The rebounder has to have the passing skills of a D1 scholarship QB.
If there isn't a guy on the team who gets every board, you've got to send 2 guys for the rebound. Now there's only 3 chances of a defensive breakdown and only one option for a short pass.
Turgeon sent 3 guys for rebounds, which left only a deeper, full-speed option for the outlet pass and typically Braeuer streaking to the hoop. That's why WSU's transition game seemed to be Braeuer trying to shoot over taller players at the basket.
Then there's the secondary break. A typical setup is 2 3-point guys hanging out deep and one guy trying to set up for an interior pass. The key to the secondary break is the rebounders beating the opponents down the floor to create a 5-on-4 or 5-on-3 situation.
Tall, skinny guys tend to run faster than tall, bulky guys.
If WSU has a rebounder with an arm like a QB, then Kendall Wright could be a Shocker. Marshall likes tall SG's. Wright runs a 4.4 40 and had a 39" vertical as a SO in HS. Wright is 5'11", but he's a BCS-caliber WR. He can catch the ball.
It doesn't matter how fast a player is or how high he can jump if there's no one who can throw the transition pass to him and that's difficult.
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