KK or Kayleigh, who's your guess? | Page 3 | The Boneyard

KK or Kayleigh, who's your guess?

I agree with this. A pg is a very specialized position and one that doesn't exactly fit Azzi or Ash. It's not just about bringing the ball up the floor, which is just the tip of the iceberg of what a pg does. It involves a complicated set of responsibilities on both ends of the floor.

Azzi can play pg in a pinch, but it's not her best position and could well take away from her strength as a spot-up shooter. In so many games, her defensive positioning allowed her to get down the court to the opposite wing on a steal or a long rebound, ready for a 3. As others have noticed, this spread the floor and put immense pressure on the opposing team's ability to defend against Uconn's transition offense. If Azzi is your pg in the full sense of the word, that position may slow her down in transition. Paige was rarely the one who finished plays in transition unless they began with her stealing the ball up top. She was usually the one who initiated the transition game, and trailed behind the break to clean it up if needed. The 'tip of the spear' was mostly Sarah and Azzi.

And Ash is not a pg by temperament or skill set. Nor does she typically lead the break. She is a tremendous spot-up shooter, a fierce on-ball defender, and is great at harrying opposing rebounders under the rim at both ends of the court. None of these really fit with the role of a pg.

I am pretty confident that only KK and Kayleigh will play like true point guards this season. But once again Geno has stacked the team with excellent ball handlers. I'm thinking of players who can break a press, but also who can slash into the lane, score off the dribble, as well as beat opponents in the open court. KK and Kayleigh fit this bill, of course, but also Azzi and Morgan and Kelis. These are all very skilled players. Slightly less skilled, but still very good ball handlers are Ash, Sarah, Allie and Carol. These players won't freeze anyone with a 'killa-crossover' but they are heady enough to break a press in a pinch. The new x-factor as a ball handler is Blanca. Videos suggest she can break down a defense with her handles and actually does have a 'killa-crossover.'

What I see is 10 very strong ball handlers on this roster. This means I think Geno will always have at least 3 of them on the floor in any unit. Last season, UConn was not a press-able team, and this will be even more true this season. Of course, it also means that Geno doesn't really need to have a simple pg on the floor. His positionless offense thrives when anyone can initiate the transition game or the half court offense.
Bingo! A secondary ballhandler isn't the same thing as a second point guard. We saw the importance of a secondary ballhandler in a few games when Nika was all UConn had.

And as OD said, Sarah will likely be a point forward.
 
I agree with this. A pg is a very specialized position and one that doesn't exactly fit Azzi or Ash. It's not just about bringing the ball up the floor, which is just the tip of the iceberg of what a pg does. It involves a complicated set of responsibilities on both ends of the floor.

Azzi can play pg in a pinch, but it's not her best position and could well take away from her strength as a spot-up shooter. In so many games, her defensive positioning allowed her to get down the court to the opposite wing on a steal or a long rebound, ready for a 3. As others have noticed, this spread the floor and put immense pressure on the opposing team's ability to defend against Uconn's transition offense. If Azzi is your pg in the full sense of the word, that position may slow her down in transition. Paige was rarely the one who finished plays in transition unless they began with her stealing the ball up top. She was usually the one who initiated the transition game, and trailed behind the break to clean it up if needed. The 'tip of the spear' was mostly Sarah and Azzi.

And Ash is not a pg by temperament or skill set. Nor does she typically lead the break. She is a tremendous spot-up shooter, a fierce on-ball defender, and is great at harrying opposing rebounders under the rim at both ends of the court. None of these really fit with the role of a pg.

I am pretty confident that only KK and Kayleigh will play like true point guards this season. But once again Geno has stacked the team with excellent ball handlers. I'm thinking of players who can break a press, but also who can slash into the lane, score off the dribble, as well as beat opponents in the open court. KK and Kayleigh fit this bill, of course, but also Azzi and Morgan and Kelis. These are all very skilled players. Slightly less skilled, but still very good ball handlers are Ash, Sarah, Allie and Carol. These players won't freeze anyone with a 'killa-crossover' but they are heady enough to break a press in a pinch. The new x-factor as a ball handler is Blanca. Videos suggest she can break down a defense with her handles and actually does have a 'killa-crossover.'

What I see is 10 very strong ball handlers on this roster. This means I think Geno will always have at least 3 of them on the floor in any unit. Last season, UConn was not a press-able team, and this will be even more true this season. Of course, it also means that Geno doesn't really need to have a simple pg on the floor. His positionless offense thrives when anyone can initiate the transition game or the half court offense.
Just thinking out loud: what do a historic amount of ball handlers (especially at the W/F positions) and posts, a stacked full roster and mix-match portend, if anything?
  • This is the situation Geno and CD find themselves in this coming season and the next (more so with Olivia?);
  • The conventional wisdom on having many high BBIQ ball handlers are that many of the best players are that and they greatly enhance read-and-react;
  • And what if all players — except longer-runway freshmen — have made their cases in practice for Geno to play them?
  • This past season, exceptional guard depth (with Paige calling Jokic-point-forward Sarah a “big guard”), led Geno to hone small ball (no traditional center) as a winning time combination;
  • Could the Geno-curated rosters this season and next (with Olivia?) portend to Geno honing another family of winning time combinations where there are no purer 1’s (a la MN Lynx) or the purer 1’s vastly improve on their 3-pt accuracy;
  • Of course, these combinations must be TN and SC proof;
  • With agile posts and wings, these combinations are not necessarily strategically confined to games mostly played in the half court.
But only Geno can truly answer this question, but it is fun to speculate anyway. This past season, he had the Big 3 exceptional hybrid ball handlers, but the team was a little bit thin and green in the post.
 
Just thinking out loud: what do a historic amount of ball handlers (especially at the W/F positions) and posts, a stacked full roster and mix-match portend, if anything?
  • This is the situation Geno and CD find themselves in this coming season and the next (more so with Olivia?);
  • The conventional wisdom on having many high BBIQ ball handlers are that many of the best players are that and they greatly enhance read-and-react;
  • And what if all players — except longer-runway freshmen — have made their cases in practice for Geno to play them?
  • This past season, exceptional guard depth (with Paige calling Jokic-point-forward Sarah a “big guard”), led Geno to hone small ball (no traditional center) as a winning time combination;
  • Could the Geno-curated rosters this season and next (with Olivia?) portend to Geno honing another family of winning time combinations where there are no purer 1’s (a la MN Lynx) or the purer 1’s vastly improve on their 3-pt accuracy;
  • Of course, these combinations must be TN and SC proof;
  • With agile posts and wings, these combinations are not necessarily strategically confined to games mostly played in the half court.
But only Geno can truly answer this question, but it is fun to speculate anyway. This past season, he had the Big 3 exceptional hybrid ball handlers, but the team was a little bit thin and green in the post.
Wonderful post! Lots of food for thought.

One recurring theme in the background seems to be smallball, which is a variant of the transition offense-defense. Geno saw how Sarah was perfectly setup for the transition game, especially since she was such a threat from the perimeter but also a great shot blocker and rebounder. Her mobility and ball skills was just the icing on that cake. In past years, the break was usually finished by a big guard like Aubrey or Christyn or even Evina. But last season, the main finisher was Sarah. She didn’t need to be quicker than opposing guards because she was too big for them to stop once Paige or Azzi or KK found her with a long pass. I expect to see more of this next season, though Blanca may do a lot of the finishing too.

Danny Strong said in interviews before she came to UConn that Sarah did not want to be stuck in the low post even though she has all the skills to thrive there. I think this was meant as a warning to recruiters, and it looks like Geno really heard him. Because Geno used Sarah in exactly the way her whole family could have wished for.

One interesting prospect is that the smallball lineups may not be so small this season. Geno has three little guards (~5’9”) but a lot of his ball handlers are 6’ or bigger. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a roster like this before. He can put units on the floor with nobody under 6’2” and still have them outrun all opponents. Those lineups should make ‘short’ work of Tennessee.

Of course, I don’t think we’ll see many lineups that don’t include Azzi or Ash for their perimeter shooting, even with Sarah and Carol on the floor. But the potential is there and I’d really be curious to see what a lineup like Sarah Blanca Morgan Carol and Ayanna could accomplish.
 
I completely agree with the first two. But KK does slow down. The amount of energy she puts out is enormous and I’m not sure she can sustain that for more than 20-25 minutes a game. Last season she could be her best self for 20+ minutes and that really made a difference, especially in the second half of tough games. In her freshman year she played 30+ minutes in many games and the toll it took on her was noticeable. Watch the tournament games when Geno shortened the rotation and it’s easy to see how tired they all were in the 4th quarter. Well, everyone but Ash who can run like a mad thing for 30-35 minutes without slowing down. We almost lost to Duke and USC from fatigue that season.

This is why signing Kaitlyn was so important last season. Geno needed a platoon at pg to allow KK to put out maximum energy at the end of games. Just watch the 4th quarters of the final four games to see the truth of this. KK came in and practically ran UCLA and SC off the court singlehandedly. Like @Monte says, who finishes may be more important than who starts. The only reason Kayleigh might start games is with an eye to the 4th quarter.

Of course, we may dominate the tournament again in this coming season and take huge leads into the 4th quarter. But I doubt very much Geno is counting on this. I’d bet he’s thinking of building a team that can win the 4th quarter of close games. And this may mean giving Kayleigh a larger role at the start of games.

Sometime in February, I can picture a 1st quarter lineup like this:
  • Kayleigh Azzi Ash Sarah and Serah.
And a 4th quarter lineup like this:
  • KK Azzi Blanca Morgan and Sarah.
Why? Because in the 1st quarter Geno will have one speedy slasher, 3 rainmakers and two awesome posts. And by the 4th quarter the opposing bigs will be exhausted if they haven’t fouled out. They will not be able to run with our 4th quarter unit.
Predict that KK and Kayleigh will be in different rotations. KK will bring unlimited energy and be replaced by Kelis. Little drop off in speed or energy. Pity the poor competitive players who have to keep up with those two.
 
Predict that KK and Kayleigh will be in different rotations. KK will bring unlimited energy and be replaced by Kelis. Little drop off in speed or energy. Pity the poor competitive players who have to keep up with those two.
The Big Fish may prove to be lightning in a bottle. Wouldn’t that be fun? I wonder if KK will become a role model for her.
 
Geno LOVED the PG duo of last year. There was a fresh PG the entire game. They split the "meaningful minutes" almost evenly. I see the same system this year. KK and K9 will be a great duo. Kelis will get clean-up. KK will start and Geno will know when the change is needed.
For all the posters who know more than I do --- What team (last year) had a point guard duo that could be interchangeable with little variation? I can't think of any? In fact, it seems that most teams (like ND) had point guards that played 35 minutes or more in big games. UConn has a BIG advantage with that duo.
 
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KK starts. She knows the system and she knows her teammates. K9 is going to get plenty of playing time. She has the skill set and the chemistry with her and the team will developed quickly. And I would be surprised to see both of them on the court at the same time.
 
Okay, you'd think in my 70th year that I would have learned to be clear in my thoughts, Bigboote. Maybe I finally will be if I make it to 80. But until then, I completely agree with your assessment that Azzi will be a starter. So, here's my 1-5 starter thoughts:

1 - K.K.
2 - Ashlyn
3 - Azzi
4. Sara
5. Jana

And here's why; Geno loves his guards. He basically started 3 guards this past season: Kaitlyn, Azzi and Paige. In my opinion, Paige was essentially occupying the 3 spot, even though she's a guard. I expect Azzi to slide over to that "spot" this season. Ashlyn Shade was somewhat overshadowed by Paige being on the floor this season. She can be streaky, but we've seen enough spurts to know that she can also be a devastating offensive presence. With Paige gone, I expect she will have many more opportunities and will be a force as a junior. I could see penciling Shade in for a consistent 15 points a game. And she's absolute gold on the defensive end, even if she does foul occasionally. I love how she wrestles rebounds away from much taller players. My sympathy goes out to Chloe Kitts, who probably has nightmares about her.

In my totally sentimental assessment, I'd love to see Caroline Ducharme break into the starting lineup at the 3 but unfortunately, I think all the injuries have taken their toll. I would love to be proven wrong about that. And I hope that Ayanna Patterson has something to say about the starting lineup if she's now completely healthy.

Anyway, thanks for your reply to my comment. I'm looking forward to learning if any of my thoughts are rational when the season starts. And I've got my fingers crossed about injuries, as always.
You have Jana starting instead of Serah..can't see that happening
 
Geno LOVED the PG duo of last year. There was a fresh PG the entire game. They split the "meaningful minutes" almost evenly. I see the same system this year. KK and K9 will be a great duo. Kelis will get clean-up. KK will start and Geno will know when the change is needed.
For all the posters who know more than I do --- What team (last year) had a point guard duo that could be interchangeable with little variation? I can't think of any? In fact, it seems that most teams (like ND) had point guards that played 35 minutes or more in big games. UConn has a BIG advantage with that duo.
Duo? UConn had no less than 5 players on their team who played pg in HS, and were capable of initiating the offense this past season, 6 if you count Sarah. The others were Paige, Kaitlyn, KK, Ash & Allie. For opposing teams it was “death by a thousand point guards.” 😎
 
All i know is that if KK develops a consistent 3pt shot, its basically game over. I suspect that most teams will probably dare KK to shoot the 3ball, adding an extra defender to Sarah or Azzi. But if KK knocks down anywhere from 2-4 3 pointers per game, Uconn will be simply unguardable.

KK's overall focus next year should be ball distribution and reading the defense being thrown at Uconn. Paige was a magician as far as reading what other teams are trying to impose. This allowed Paige to understand the flow of the game and know in what parts on the floor her teammates should be in.
 
The way KK was a difference maker coming off the bench last year, it would seem right to do the same this year. BUT, KK has earned the starting spot at PG, and even if Kayleigh does seem better in practice, Geno will still start KK. She has earned the starting spot, as has Ash. PT will be determined by how everyone is playing in each individual game, so I believe KK and K9 will play similar minutes, with each one playing more, which will be determined on how the game is going. Each will play an important part in this offence, and each will be able to show off what they bring to the table. We know KK, but K9s play will still be a mystery to us until the season tips off.
 
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One recurring theme in Geno’s remarks before every season is that you can only “earn” anything — minutes, starting spots, etc. — in practice. Various players have said similar things over the years too. Neither Ash nor KK can have earned anything for this year in last season.

I think when we say stuff like that we’re responding to what we saw in the previous season and making a guess about how competitive they’ll be in practices. In a summer presser in Storrs, Serah was asked what struck her about the team and she says she was surprised by how competitive even casual pickup games are. She’d never experienced anything like it at Wisconsin. This is what Geno is talking about.
 
Viewing the season as a whole, not just the first week. One will start, one will come off the bench, and occasionally both of them will be on the floor together. And we're just prognosticating here. No one who matters in Storrs will be influenced by anything we say here.

My guess is by February Kayleigh will be the starting PG, but they'll divide the minutes pretty evenly. And it is possible, in my view, that they'll both start. I wouldn't put it past Geno to start KK Kayleigh Azzi Sarah and Serah.
If KK starts the season as the PG, which I believe she will, Kayleigh Heckel will come off the bench the whole season or only start if someone gets hurt. KK is not relinquishing her starting role once she gets it back. She has experience starting and coming off the bench, but she will do what she needs to do to ensure she starts and remains the starter. In KK I trust!
 
With the abundance of talent on this team there will be alot of substitutions and play time sharing. Remember they didnt come to sit they came to be developed and play. Therefore it really doesnt matter who starts. What matters is how they fit in to UConns team chemistry and if they can execute. When they prove they can execute and run the plays on both sides of the ball they will play and if they can't their minutes will be limited until they can. This can be a very explosive team. The competition amongst them all will be fierce at practice and in games. They will want to prove themselves. We all know this team has everything to be great. I think their potential is far higher then most of us can imagine. It will take time and we need to be patient for it to all come together.
 
One recurring theme in Geno’s remarks before every season is that you can only “earn” anything — minutes, starting spots, etc. — in practice. Various players have said similar things over the years too. Neither Ash nor KK can have earned anything for this year in last season.
Agree with the principal, but I think it doesn't take into account that KK and Shade are known quantities that understand Geno's fairly complex "read and react" system. To an extent, they don't need to "earn" the coaches' trust because they've already earned it over two seasons, playing significant roles. That said, I fully agree that minutes are earned during practice, and the best players will play, but given their considerable headstart in experience, it is highly unlikely that anyone just coming into the system could surplant them.

(Different circumstance from Williams, who is coming in averaging a double double in a position that was a noted vulnerability last year.)
 
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With the abundance of talent on this team there will be alot of substitutions and play time sharing. Remember they didnt come to sit they came to be developed and play. Therefore it really doesnt matter who starts. What matters is how they fit in to UConns team chemistry and if they can execute.
Agree. I think we already have a good idea of who the starters are. To me the more interesting question is who is the first off the bench. Geno as long said he wants that first sub to "make the team better" so it'll be interesting to me to see who he feels feels that "spark plug" or maybe "fifth gear" role.
 
Agree with the principal, but I think it doesn't take into account that KK and Shade are known quantities, that understand Gino's fairly complex "reading and react" system. To an extent, they don't need to "earn" the coaches trust because they've already earned it over two seasons, playing significant roles. That said, I fully agree that minutes are earned during practice, and the best players will play, but given their considerable headstart in experience, it is highly unlikely that anyone just coming into the system could surplant them.

(Different circumstance from Williams, who is coming in averaging a double double in a position that was a noted vulnerability last year.)
I would suggest a slight modification to the idea that, “minutes are earned during practice.” I think it’s clear that players earn the opportunity to play during practice. But their actual performance in games determines whether they continue to play meaningful minutes in games or not.

Ultimately, Geno needs to trust the players he puts in games to perform in high pressure situations. That only occurs if they perform in games once they are given the opportunity.
 
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Agree. I think we already have a good idea of who the starters are. To me the more interesting question is who is the first off the bench. Geno as long said he wants that first sub to "make the team better" so it'll be interesting to me to see who he feels feels that "spark plug" or maybe "fifth gear" role.
We’ll have to see how they gel, but Kayleigh and either Blanca or Morgan could fill the disrupters role that KK and Ashlynn filled last year. If Allie finds her shot, she could be the instant floor-spreading offense that’s sometimes needed.
 
We’ll have to see how they gel, but Kayleigh and either Blanca or Morgan could fill the disrupters role that KK and Ashlynn filled last year. If Allie finds her shot, she could be the instant floor-spreading offense that’s sometimes needed.
Agree. I think Kayleigh is our backup point guard. So her primary function will be to rest KK or give her a chance to sit if she is in foul trouble. But yeah Blanca, Morgan, Allie, Kelis or Carol could all end up filling that role. It will be interesting to see who emerges.

By the way, that doesn't mean that the others aren't going to see playing time. This is just a particular niche for a player to kick the offense into a higher gear when the defense is already tired from dealing with the starters.
 
Duo? UConn had no less than 5 players on their team who played pg in HS, and were capable of initiating the offense this past season, 6 if you count Sarah. The others were Paige, Kaitlyn, KK, Ash & Allie. For opposing teams it was “death by a thousand point guards.” 😎
Hey Olddude, I guess I was not clear about my post. For all meaningful games Kaitlyn started at PG and then was replaced by KK. They were the point guard "DUO". Geno knew when one was tired or not firing on all cylinders. Those two were the "Dynamic Duo of PGs."
They ran the point 90% of the time. UConn's point guard was always fresh because they had TWO quality point guards (interchangeable) in those tough games. ND did not. SC did not. Besides UConn --who did?
KK and K9 will be the DUO this year IMHO. The other 7 or 8 point guards on the team will be on the bench or playing SF or SG.
 
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Hey Olddude, I guess I was not clear about my post. For all meaningful games Kaitlyn started at PG and then was replaced by KK. They were the point guard "DUO". Geno knew when one was tired or not firing on all cylinders. Those two were the "Dynamic Duo of PGs."
They ran the point 90% of the time. UConn's point guard was always fresh because they had TWO quality point guards in those tough games. ND did not. SC did not. Besides UConn --who did?
KK and K9 will be the DUO this year IMHO. The other 7 or 8 point guards on the team will be on the bench or playing SF or SG.
Here’s the thing. On UConn WBB multiple players handle the ball, pass and cut. Geno will run his offense through any number of players on the court at anytime. That’s what makes UConn nearly impossible to defend.

The traditional concept of having a single point guard on the floor to initiate the offense most of the time, doesn’t really apply to the Huskies. UConn is all about exploiting matchups, however that manifests itself. They do it better than any other team in college basketball.
 
Agree with the principal, but I think it doesn't take into account that KK and Shade are known quantities that understand Geno's fairly complex "read and react" system. To an extent, they don't need to "earn" the coaches' trust because they've already earned it over two seasons, playing significant roles. That said, I fully agree that minutes are earned during practice, and the best players will play, but given their considerable headstart in experience, it is highly unlikely that anyone just coming into the system could surplant them.

(Different circumstance from Williams, who is coming in averaging a double double in a position that was a noted vulnerability last year.)
I agree with everything you’re thinking here as well as your forecasts of who the starters will be. But I think my earlier post did account for KK and Ash’s experience with the read and react system. This gives them a competitive advantage in practice which is where they’ll earn playing time. But it’s not a ‘get out of jail free card’ or an inside track.

I realize I’m splitting the proverbial hair, but the point about earning minutes in current practices rather than in previous seasons is an important one for a few reasons, not least of which is team morale. Everyone starts the season with the same shot at earning minutes based on what they’re doing now in competition with current teammates. And if they don’t win the competition and don’t start or get major minutes they’ll understand exactly why this happened and what they might do to change it in subsequent practices.

And I think I agree with your suggestion that Serah is likely to start. It’s not special circumstances because of what she did at Wisconsin or because we have a perceived weakness in the frontcourt. We are simply expressing confidence in the supposition that she’ll win a starting spot and our confidence is based on the talent and skills she’s demonstrated elsewhere. But if Jana or Ice can outplay her in practice, they’ll win the starting spot. If she can’t shut down their offense and if they can shut down hers, she won’t start over one of them regardless of what she accomplished elsewhere. I just don’t think that will happen.

I’d say the same thing about Sarah or Azzi and would have said it about Paige. I don’t believe anyone is going to out-compete Sarah. But if they could, they’d play ahead of her. Clearly Geno takes chemistry into consideration too and not just scoring or defending head to head, but this is part and parcel of the read and react system.

Geno actually made a joke about this in a presser during Paige’s sophomore year when she was trying to come back from injury. When someone asked if she’d start right away he said, “Of course, she’ll have to earn her playing time,” and then started laughing. It turns out she didn’t start right away and had to ease her way back into game competition. But it was obvious to everyone that Geno was simply getting her ready to start in the tournament. He knew even then that the team couldn’t go far without her and I’m sure all her teammates knew it too. There were no hard feelings.


Edited to add: I agree with @oldude that performance in games counts too. The pressure of games is a factor in the competitive assessments Geno makes. In that sense, I’d almost say that games are an extension of practice.

And I’d agree with @CL82 that we mainly know who will start and the first off the bench is interesting question. I’d phrase this a little differently as, we have a good idea who the main 7 or 8 will be, though exactly which 5 are on the floor at the opening tip is less clear to me. The constant for me is Sarah and Serah and Azzi. But those other two spot seem to me up for grabs among 4 or 5 tremendous players. If he wants to go small play KK together with Kayleigh they might start. And if he wants to go big he might feature Blanca at the tip. And if he thinks more perimeter shooting will matter in a particular game then Ash might get the nod.
 
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This gives them a competitive advantage in practice which is where they’ll earn playing time.
Their knowledge of Geno's system has a far bigger impact in games. They need to be able to see plays developing and know what to do. That's not an easy skill, as we've heard from standouts in the WNBA, such as Napheesa Collier. In fact, it is probably the central factor that differentiates former Connecticut players from other players in the WNBA.

None of that means that players are automatically granted playing time via seniority. It just means that it takes time to fully understand Geno's system and implement it in real time during a game. So, far more often than not players with more experience will outplay new players on the court, all else being equal.

Honestly, I don't think we significantly disagree. We just have a little different weighting system on the impact of experience on play.
 
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Hey Olddude, I guess I was not clear about my post. For all meaningful games Kaitlyn started at PG and then was replaced by KK. They were the point guard "DUO". Geno knew when one was tired or not firing on all cylinders. Those two were the "Dynamic Duo of PGs."
They ran the point 90% of the time. UConn's point guard was always fresh because they had TWO quality point guards (interchangeable) in those tough games. ND did not. SC did not. Besides UConn --who did?
KK and K9 will be the DUO this year IMHO. The other 7 or 8 point guards on the team will be on the bench or playing SF or SG.
In position name yes, in reality the team ran thru Paige, she was the point of attack, she ran the team. Call the others whatever you want, Paige was the point guard and the best at it in the country.
 
Honestly, I don't think we significantly disagree. We just have a little different weighting system on the impact of experience on play.
I agree that we don’t really disagree. In fact, I think we weigh experience (especially in terms of chemistry) very much in the same way.
 
In position name yes, in reality the team ran thru Paige, she was the point of attack, she ran the team. Call the others whatever you want, Paige was the point guard and the best at it in the country.
The only reason I would not call Paige a PG in last seasons team is because she was not restricted to typical PG defensive responsibilities. Yes, on offense the ball almost always passed through her hands, and she often brought the ball up the court. But this is just the tip of the iceberg of what a PG does. One example: the PG is responsible for maintaining court balance to prevent the opponent’s fast breaks, and is usually the last line of defense in such cases. Paige did not often do this. And a sign of it is all the blocks and defensive rebounds she got. This is not typical of a PG.

All this really means is that Geno doesn’t depend on the traditional role of PG. KK and Kaitlyn were usually the first back in transition defense, which is typical of a PG. and they often brought ball up and initiated the offense. But they didn’t always manage ball distribution in the half court offense. Paige had a much bigger role in this aspect of the position, as did Sarah.
 
Who's starting maybe over-rated!
Remember Caroline Doty started every game her Senior year but only played the beginning 5 minutes of each half then sat! For a total of ten minutes. Geno trusted her to get the team off to a good start!
 
Among the many things that I look forward to seeing (e.g., playing time distribution) when the season gets underway is the percentage of time a small ball versus a bigger line-up is employed. I know that Geno used the small ball line-up effectively to counteract the height of larger teams and often to have the team's best five players on the floor. Still, I am very curious to see how frequently three players will be on the floor who are under six feet tall, as many have suggested with KK, Azzi, and Ash on the floor together when there are many more viable and healthy post options this year, rather than last year.
 
Still, I am very curious to see how frequently three players will be on the floor who are under six feet tall, as many have suggested with KK, Azzi, and Ash on the floor together
This is a fascinating question. Tall is important, no doubt. But quickness and intensity sometime matters more, I suspect. A speedy 5’9” may be more valuable than slower 6’1” in some game situations. I have a feeling this is a tension Geno will be grappling with all season. I expect we’ll see a lot of experimentation with precisely this.

One observation in favor of the littles is the final four games. Against UCLA, the small lineup posed significant problems for their taller, slower lineups. Against SC, the quickness advantage was not nearly as pronounced which meant Geno had to respond when Dauda entered the game to counter her rebounding.
 
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