JoePgh
Cranky pants and wise acre
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- Aug 30, 2011
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In the last week or two, a consensus seems to have emerged (possibly including Geno as well as less informed talking heads) that while UConn is very good in many aspects of basketball, it is at best undistinguished and perhaps even weak in the area of rebounding. One of the local newspaper reporters who cover UConn WBB as their beat noted that despite excellent statistics on shooting percentage, 3-point production, scoring defense, and several other statistical categories, UConn's rebounding margin is about 100th in the NCAA, and other rebounding statistics are in the same mediocre range.
Yesterday's Marquette game in Milwaukee did nothing to disprove that hypothesis. Apart from the rebounding stats from yesterday's box score, it was obvious from watching (especially in the first half) that UConn was getting basically nothing on the offensive boards. Sarah Strong had one rebound in the entire game (almost unimaginable). KK was UConn's top rebounder with 6. KK, Ashlynn, Azzi, and K9 had a combined total of 14 rebounds (but just 3 offensive rebounds) while the "twin towers" of Serah and Jana had a total of 5 rebounds in 26 combined minutes, although Serah was the only UConn player with multiple offensive rebounds (she had 2!).
It's worth noting that the first UConn - Marquette game in December showed an entirely different pattern. In that game, Sarah had 7 rebounds, Serah had 6, and Jana had 7 including 6 offensive rebounds. UConn won the rebounding battle by 37-27, and won the battle for offensive boards by 16-13. Three differences are obvious: (a) the December game was in Connecticut; (b) Sarah wasn't sick; and (c) Blanca played 22 minutes and had 4 rebounds. Do these factors fully account for the difference?
UConn's poor rebounding was not seen in other games against quality opponents:
Louisville (neutral): Total rebounds 47-43 in UConn's favor; offensive rebounds 15-12 UConn
Florida State (home): Total 40-27 UConn; offensive 12-10 UConn
Ohio State (home): Total 40-31 UConn; offensive 14-9 UConn
Michigan (Mohegan): Total 47-43 UConn; offensive 15-13 Michigan
Southern Cal on road: Total 41-33 UConn; offensive 10-7 UConn
Iowa (Barclay Center): Total 34-25 Iowa; offensive 10-9 Iowa
Notre Dame (home): Total 39-24 UConn; offensive 7-2 UConn
Tennessee (home): Total 39-30 UConn; offensive 11-9 Tennessee
So UConn won the total rebounding battle against all of these major opponents except Iowa, and lost the offensive rebound margin in 4 out of 8 games, but not by a big margin in any of these games. So the rebounding performance (or lack thereof) against Marquette in Milwaukee was much worse than against any of the ranked opponents.
I don't have the answer to this puzzle, but I assume the answer lies in the three factors mentioned above. This is certainly worth watching in the next few games. But the good news is that it does not seem to be a chronic problem against quality opponents.
Yesterday's Marquette game in Milwaukee did nothing to disprove that hypothesis. Apart from the rebounding stats from yesterday's box score, it was obvious from watching (especially in the first half) that UConn was getting basically nothing on the offensive boards. Sarah Strong had one rebound in the entire game (almost unimaginable). KK was UConn's top rebounder with 6. KK, Ashlynn, Azzi, and K9 had a combined total of 14 rebounds (but just 3 offensive rebounds) while the "twin towers" of Serah and Jana had a total of 5 rebounds in 26 combined minutes, although Serah was the only UConn player with multiple offensive rebounds (she had 2!).
It's worth noting that the first UConn - Marquette game in December showed an entirely different pattern. In that game, Sarah had 7 rebounds, Serah had 6, and Jana had 7 including 6 offensive rebounds. UConn won the rebounding battle by 37-27, and won the battle for offensive boards by 16-13. Three differences are obvious: (a) the December game was in Connecticut; (b) Sarah wasn't sick; and (c) Blanca played 22 minutes and had 4 rebounds. Do these factors fully account for the difference?
UConn's poor rebounding was not seen in other games against quality opponents:
Louisville (neutral): Total rebounds 47-43 in UConn's favor; offensive rebounds 15-12 UConn
Florida State (home): Total 40-27 UConn; offensive 12-10 UConn
Ohio State (home): Total 40-31 UConn; offensive 14-9 UConn
Michigan (Mohegan): Total 47-43 UConn; offensive 15-13 Michigan
Southern Cal on road: Total 41-33 UConn; offensive 10-7 UConn
Iowa (Barclay Center): Total 34-25 Iowa; offensive 10-9 Iowa
Notre Dame (home): Total 39-24 UConn; offensive 7-2 UConn
Tennessee (home): Total 39-30 UConn; offensive 11-9 Tennessee
So UConn won the total rebounding battle against all of these major opponents except Iowa, and lost the offensive rebound margin in 4 out of 8 games, but not by a big margin in any of these games. So the rebounding performance (or lack thereof) against Marquette in Milwaukee was much worse than against any of the ranked opponents.
I don't have the answer to this puzzle, but I assume the answer lies in the three factors mentioned above. This is certainly worth watching in the next few games. But the good news is that it does not seem to be a chronic problem against quality opponents.