He was doing it last night, and Ollie inexplicably benched him.
IMHO when fans state "give" Enoch playing time just firms up the point he hasnt been "earning" playing time in practice.We didnt seem to have anyone who could guard Grey in the second half and taking Brimah out of the post where he could swat was a big mistake.Enoch could have could have grabbed some rebounds and could have scored etc is but when in this magical new and improved Enoch going to do it consistently?
He was lost out there and had no physical presence, defense becomes even more porous with him in there.
Overrated. How many teams that will be playing in the big dance have these "great" shot blockers? How many even block many shots? It's overrated, not every shot that he blocks would've gone in and I'd prefer a guy who can actually defend the post like expected and then get a rebound of a miss. Not sure we have one I admit but I like our chances better than having that guy out there. After last night it is confirmed those who think we will miss him will be surprised.
Klike when maybe you can finally get a call, because when you get a T with the ball down 5 and only 50 seconds left, you guaranteed your team that has a chance is going to lose
and there's no time for calls yo help you anyhow
priceless
he has been the head coach for 5 years. How long are you giving him to learn one of the basic things a friggin high school coach knows? This is something he should have learned in the MAAC not at UConn.He does not use technicals strategically. He gets them when he loses it emotionally.
This is all part of learning to work the refs. Until the develops that skill, we are at a disadvantage.
Dude I said Brimah was out of the post guarding out of position Meyer,,,r.i.f....Okafor didnt block key shots, or Thabeet orDrummond now your just being silly.
I take a stance somewhere between you and @chiller99.5. KO has been using AB as a defensive stopper during this recent run. He's been putting in AB at the end of games to eliminate some of the opposing teams ability to drive to the basket and score particularly because by the ends of games the guards are getting tired or are in foul trouble. It's a decent strategy in spite of AB's limitations because Steve is the polar opposite. He doesn't move his feet when players drive to the hoop resulting in either a foul or allowing the players to get around him and make an easy shot.Overrated. How many teams that will be playing in the big dance have these "great" shot blockers? How many even block many shots? It's overrated, not every shot that he blocks would've gone in and I'd prefer a guy who can actually defend the post like expected and then get a rebound of a miss. Not sure we have one I admit but I like our chances better than having that guy out there. After last night it is confirmed those who think we will miss him will be surprised.
Never said that lets stick to the point, mines is that shot blocking is a key to our defense and drives are funneled into the big man be it Thabeet,Brimah or Joe Blow how successful they might be its the position not the player.Not trying to be argumentative just understand my point is all I ask.Please don't compare him to Okafor or Thabeet, this isn't close. The could defend, rebound, block shots and guard the post you can't even mistakenly throw his name in that hat it's ridiculous.
Never said that lets stick to the point, mines is that shot blocking is a key to our defense and drives are funneled into the big man be it Thabeet,Brimah or Joe Blow how successful they might be its the position not the player.Not trying to be argumentative just understand my point is all I ask.
Understood, and this game no one stepped up defensively
“We did a [film] edit just on how many shots [Amida] Brimah blocked,” Houston coach Kelvin Sampson said. “And I think that scared the bejesus out of them from going out and shooting over him. Any time you collapse a defense, it comes down to making the right play, and the right play is usually not throwing it up over his outstretched arms. It’s usually making the extra pass, and that’s what we were good at today, moving the ball. Sometimes it took three passes and sometimes it took seven, but we were patient enough to move it and we usually wound up with a good shot. … I felt we played with a high basketball IQ today.”
Never said that lets stick to the point, mines is that shot blocking is a key to our defense and drives are funneled into the big man be it Thabeet,Brimah or Joe Blow how successful they might be its the position not the player.Not trying to be argumentative just understand my point is all I ask.
Understood, and this game no one stepped up defensively
“We did a [film] edit just on how many shots [Amida] Brimah blocked,” Houston coach Kelvin Sampson said. “And I think that scared the bejesus out of them from going out and shooting over him. Any time you collapse a defense, it comes down to making the right play, and the right play is usually not throwing it up over his outstretched arms. It’s usually making the extra pass, and that’s what we were good at today, moving the ball. Sometimes it took three passes and sometimes it took seven, but we were patient enough to move it and we usually wound up with a good shot. … I felt we played with a high basketball IQ today.”
Tell that to Oakfor. The shots that he blocked and altered in 2004 literally won the championship for Uconn. He took that team on his back defensively, in large part. Without him, Uconn goes out against Duke (if they are lucky) with a wimper and maybe a 10 to 15 point loss. A great shot blocker changes the game. I am not claiming Brimah is even close to Oakfor, he could not even hold a candle to 04 Oakafor. But to act like it does not make a difference is hyberbole.Overrated. How many teams that will be playing in the big dance have these "great" shot blockers? How many even block many shots? It's overrated, not every shot that he blocks would've gone in and I'd prefer a guy who can actually defend the post like expected and then get a rebound of a miss. Not sure we have one I admit but I like our chances better than having that guy out there. After last night it is confirmed those who think we will miss him will be surprised.
i.e. "all it takes is a tiny amount of basketball IQ to outsmart Brimah, and he's completely neutralized"
Justin Brown, love The Blunder from DownunderAt this point, I'd play Justin Brown instead of Brimah, if he were still on the team. I'd even play the man whose name shant be mentioned instead of Amidah.
Tenspro your a smart guy you know better. When Kelvin Sampson says their gameplan focused on neutralizing Brimah why would he do that if he didn't think highly of him. Sampson didnt say he was worried about Ollies offensive or defensive schemes or Jalen Adams beating them, but he was worried about Brimah's effect on the game. That tells you all you need to know about who Houston and Sampson respect on this UCONN team. A team doesn't need everyone to have the same skillset, ad I have no doubt that Sampson would love to have Brimah instead of say Myers or Chicken on his roster. That Houston team would probably have been the next SMU with Brimah.
Remember what Sampson said after he drubbed us a month ago without Adams, he said "Good coaching thats what UCONN HAD" not what they have now, but what they had in the past. Sampson is a smart guy and his messages are crystal clear regarding UCONN.

Tell that to Oakfor. The shots that he blocked and altered in 2004 literally won the championship for Uconn. He took that team on his back defensively, in large part. Without him, Uconn goes out against Duke (if they are lucky) with a wimper and maybe a 10 to 15 point loss. A great shot blocker changes the game. I am not claiming Brimah is even close to Oakfor, he could not even hold a candle to 04 Oakafor. But to act like it does not make a difference is hyberbole.
Okafor and Brimah in the same sentence, kidding me right? The guy played defense and blocked shots. If you gave me Okafor now and didn't even let him block a shot all year he would be twice the impact on defense of Brimah. That is my point, 2.7 blocks and a couple alters do not make up for the missed rebounds by his nose, the little guys who do score in his chest which seems togo untold by so many as well as the awful defensive positioning when not blocking those 2.7 shots. Okafor was strong, played physical on the block and how many times did you see him guard a guy straight up, hand in face and turn and get a rebound in a crowd - a lot. This guy NEVER. Sorry not at all worth your time putting these 2 in the same light of day.
Enoch had 1 rebound in 16 minutes last nite. Brimah had 8 in 24. AB had a terrible game, and Enoch had the best half of his career in the first half. But in the 2nd half Enoch was totally lost and as bad as AB was, it would have killed us to replace him with Enoch. As bad as we were, we were only down 5, with the ball, with a minute to go. And then came the T, and that was it.At least Enoch could've grabbed some rebounds there in the second half. Defense was not our problem. We just had zero inside play on offense for the whole second half. This allowed their perimeter defense to be WAY over-aggressive beyond the 3-point line, and we had no way to counter it.
Enoch had 1 rebound in 16 minutes last nite. Brimah had 8 in 24. AB had a terrible game, and Enoch had the best half of his career in the first half. But in the 2nd half Enoch was totally lost and as bad as AB was, it would have killed us to replace him with Enoch. As bad as we were, we were only down 5, with the ball, with a minute to go. And then came the T, and that was it.
In defense of this statement about funneling in, maybe even our own guards feel at times it's ok to play loose and slough off their guy since he's in the middle waiting. Problem is he's not that guy and last night really went above and beyond to prove that. Again not all on him because others weren't great but he was bad.
Um, did you read what I said carefully? I said Brimah COULD NOT hold a candle to Okafor. You know what that idiom means, no? I just said that Okafor changed the complexion of the game and Okafor proved that shot blocking COULD alter games. I said in my last sentence ¨But to act like it does not make a difference is hyberbole¨and by IT I mean shot blocking, using Okafor as an example of THAT shot blocking. I actually said very little about Brimah and I did not compare the two other than to say Okafor is better (so yes, omg, in the same sentence!), actually and I am not defending him either. Reading comprehension is good!Okafor and Brimah in the same sentence, kidding me right? The guy played defense and blocked shots. If you gave me Okafor now and didn't even let him block a shot all year he would be twice the impact on defense of Brimah. That is my point, 2.7 blocks and a couple alters do not make up for the missed rebounds by his nose, the little guys who do score in his chest which seems togo untold by so many as well as the awful defensive positioning when not blocking those 2.7 shots. Okafor was strong, played physical on the block and how many times did you see him guard a guy straight up, hand in face and turn and get a rebound in a crowd - a lot. This guy NEVER. Sorry not at all worth your time putting these 2 in the same light of day.
Um, did you read what I said carefully? I said Brimah COULD NOT hold a candle to Okafor. You know what that idiom means, no? I just said that Okafor changed the complexion of the game and Okafor proved that shot blocking COULD alter games. I said in my last sentence ¨But to act like it does not make a difference is hyberbole¨and by IT I mean shot blocking, using Okafor as an example of THAT shot blocking. I actually said very little about Brimah and I did not compare the two other than to say Okafor is better (so yes, omg, in the same sentence!), actually and I am not defending him either. Reading comprehension is good!