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The Allen Iverson effect.
The Allen Iverson effect.
I’m a Marylander living in Maine. Do people realize that women’s basketball has a rich and long tradition in Iowa. The longest and richest anywhere. I’m talking 75-80 years. They played a game of 3 on 3 that used the entire court. 3 defenders on one end and 3 offensive players on the other with a funky transition pass in between.Hats off to Iowa. Living in Big Ten country (Minnesota), Iowa has always had a pretty competitive program. I have not seen Iowa have many lean seasons. They are always well coached, and their skill development is always pretty impressive, considering how they don't land 5-Star talent. The coaching staff just develops the talent they get. Coach Jensen is going to continue that successful trend.
One of the most misunderstood quote soundbites in sports. It gave people the wrong impression of him because they didn't realize his response was a combination of frustration and grief after losing a close friend.The Allen Iverson effect.
Yes --we're a deep team.To refute your point, go back and take a look at the Michigan game replay. When Michigan got to two points with 26 seconds remaining, Geno subbed in Allie for Serah Williams expecting Michigan to foul, which they did. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, Sarah got the ball into Azzi, who is probably one of the best free throw shooters in the nation. Allie wasn't the recipient of the inbounds pass, but Geno trusts that she is a better free throw shooter than Serah. But the point remains, you don't sub in someone you don't trust when the game is on the line (unless fouls or injuries dictate otherwise.) Depending upon the situation and match-ups, Geno does trust Blanca, Allie, and Kayleigh to deliver.
Really appreciated the thoughtfulness of your coach and the quality of your team's play. You've got a good'un.Congrats to UConn for a completely dominating victory. We absolutely will pay money to avoid UConn in the pairings to attempt to get to the Final Four. Review of the box score was surprising: felt like the Huskies shot about 60% from 3 but alas, it was only 13-29 for 45%.
26 turnovers by us was disappointing; I expected 20 at least, but not the type that UConn forced. So many of them were just "poke aways"; Iowa needs to be much stronger with the ball. The other thing that was really embarrassing was our offensive flow; non-existent would be kind. UConn's could be described as: "pass and cut"; Iowa's: "dribble and watch". Huskies play great D; quite a bit easier when your opponent doesn't even move on offense.
This loss will be beneficial to Iowa's growth. Good luck to you the rest of the way.
I totally second this appraisal. Hats off to Jan Jensen for maintaining the standard of excellence she inherited from her mentor, Lisa Bluder. Iowa is a well-coached team and it really shows. And hats off to the Iowa AD for choosing to continue the tradition of excellence by promoting from within rather than bringing in an outsider.Hats off to Iowa. Living in Big Ten country (Minnesota), Iowa has always had a pretty competitive program. I have not seen Iowa have many lean seasons. They are always well coached, and their skill development is always pretty impressive, considering how they don't land 5-Star talent. The coaching staff just develops the talent they get. Coach Jensen is going to continue that successful trend.
I think Heckel's minutes were also a product of ChitChat Wright, and how Geno seemed to feel KK (and maybe KK alone) could guard her.When K9 came in during first half, I agree that she wasn't effective, and if I'm remembering correctly, KK came back in. When K9 subbed for KK with 2-3 mins left to go in 3rd Q, I ifigure Geno was just trying to steal some rest minutes for KK, as he used to do for Paige last year. K9 did well in those 2 mins to end the quarter.
Believe it is. Michigan has majority of the nationally televised games during conference play this season.I haven't looked yet but I hope that the Michigan vs Iowa game(s) are nationally televised (Fox, B1G Network, etc.). That should be a pretty good matchup. Unfortunately one team will lose but I hope they are nail biters.
The same when these two teams play UCLA and USC during their conference schedule.
I agree with the comparison of Maya
don’t agree at all that “allie is a liability against quicker players” that may have been true last yearOverall, we beat a top team by almost 30 and one could argue that we had a off shooting night in the first.
One thing that scares me about Azzi is that she can miss a lot of shots before she starts hitting again. The good thing is that she then hits a lot of shots. I think she made 4 of her last 5 three pointers which is insane.
KK is the consummate floor general. I have been very impressed with her decision making. Not just by the passes she makes, but also by the passes she doesn't make. You can count on her making the right decision most every time, which is a big relief for a coach. If she could hit a couple more shots, she could be all american. I'd like to know what the Assist TO ratio for our guards is to the opponents. Its nice to know in every game we have better guards that the opposition.
Bianca is just scratching the surface. She is rough around the edges but still good enough to make a huge impact when she enters the game.
Two players I'm still trying to figure out: Jana and Allie. I am beginning to think that Janna is not going to evolve into a scorer but instead a good rebounder and a couple put backs a game.
Allie, she can shoot no doubt, but I think she is a real liability against quicker players, making her a tricky substitution for Geno. Not so much this game, but in others and in the future.
Of course pianists schedule concerts to improve, as does every serious musician. Playing before an audience is the last and most important step, one that causes anxiety and failure in many.
It was also the last state to abandon the antiquated women’s game where there were offensive and defensive sides of the court. I wouldn’t label that a rich tradition.I’m a Marylander living in Maine. Do people realize that women’s basketball has a rich and long tradition in Iowa. The longest and richest anywhere. I’m talking 75-80 years. They played a game of 3 on 3 that used the entire court. 3 defenders on one end and 3 offensive players on the other with a funky transition pass in between.
There’s a full length film called Providence that revolved around the time when the game became extinct. The main character was a reporter relegated to doing a story on it and obviously he was surprised and impressed by it. Mothers and daughters playing basketball. If you believe in the effect of tradition. I do.
Think it’s a match up decision considering mobility, height and even girth comparisons. Generally when we double the post guards are digging at the ball from the front or assisting help side from the baseline or the middle of the lane.Couple X's and O's questions:
Why do you think UConn did not trap much yesterday? Most of the pressure was just on-ball.
Why does it seem that UConn does not try to front the post on the block. We seem ok with playing behind the post. Remember against UCLA in the Final Four Jana was super successful fronting Betts.
i suspect the coaches made a decision not to have the guardsThink it’s a match up decision considering mobility, height and even girth comparisons. Generally when we double the post guards are digging at the ball from the front or assisting help side from the baseline or the middle of the lane.
Why not? Watch the movie. It was important to a lot of people for a long time. Come on man!It was also the last state to abandon the antiquated women’s game where there were offensive and defensive sides of the court. I wouldn’t label that a rich tradition.
I'm with you on this. Allie is not a defensive liability anymore -- not because she's become super quick or athletic. It's because she has learned how to play within the system. This is the same trajectory KML followed, since she was also not super quick but was not a defensive liability because she knew where she was supposed to be on defense at all times.don’t agree at all that “allie is a liability against quicker players” that may have been true last year
she did not get beat off the dribble at all yesterday
and her defense was sound . that she’s more than a shooter and routinely when she gets a chance, puts the ball in the floor and gets to the basket. The idea that she simply a shooter can’t defend is way off base.
imho the players ahead of her are simply better players
what she has done is shown that she can compete at the biggest level of wbb and get minutes in competitive games
I once read an article on Hilary Hahn in which she said (this is from memory) that she'd played Bach every day since she was four or five, no matter how tired or sick she was. (This was after she'd had her first child, but before her recent injury.) That's love and dedication. I wish I had that kind of dedication to the craft.
Iowa fans are great women's basketball fans. At the end of the game, even though we all had our UCONN gear on, an Iowa fan offered to take a picture of us. I thought it was a very sportmanslike move. I did make a joke about getting the phone back which brought out a hearty laugh.Congrats to UConn for a completely dominating victory. We absolutely will pay money to avoid UConn in the pairings to attempt to get to the Final Four. Review of the box score was surprising: felt like the Huskies shot about 60% from 3 but alas, it was only 13-29 for 45%.
26 turnovers by us was disappointing; I expected 20 at least, but not the type that UConn forced. So many of them were just "poke aways"; Iowa needs to be much stronger with the ball. The other thing that was really embarrassing was our offensive flow; non-existent would be kind. UConn's could be described as: "pass and cut"; Iowa's: "dribble and watch". Huskies play great D; quite a bit easier when your opponent doesn't even move on offense.
This loss will be beneficial to Iowa's growth. Good luck to you the rest of the way.
My favorite quote in music is from Pablo Casals, the legendary cellist. When asked why he still practiced hours a day in his 90's, he reportedly said: "I'm beginning to notice some improvement."I once read an article on Hilary Hahn in which she said (this is from memory) that she'd played Bach every day since she was four or five, no matter how tired or sick she was. (This was after she'd had her first child, but before her recent injury.) That's love and dedication. I wish I had that kind of dedication to the craft.
But they aren’t learning the music or perfecting technique during the concertOf course pianists schedule concerts to improve, as does every serious musician. Playing before an audience is the last and most important step, one that causes anxiety and failure in many.