- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
- Messages
- 9,077
- Reaction Score
- 26,607
I was very anti High-hedge and the we won B2B. So now I have nothing to say on this topic, except you need the right personnel. Not sure we have that now.
We're around 170th the past 4 games according to Hurley.And they're still the 10th best defense in the country on kenpom. How is that possible with a team as you described?
Strongly agree this. It’s either roster construction or misfit of scheme but what troubles me most is either lack of awareness/ability to make adjustments or perhaps equally as bad, stubbornness in refusing to do so. Ball being a poor defender is not new news.two years in a row where we have a few significant personnel/scheme mismatches.
so either we aren’t making the right personnel decisions, or we aren’t good at adapting the scheme to the personnel we have.
my other 2cents is that I wish Hurley gave a little more rope to guys and prioritized season long outcomes vs. near term wins.
I would rather have given Reibe/Stewart/Ross more minutes to work thru things during the course of the season with the hopes that they can figure things out and we peak late.
But I get it is hard to deny the allure of a potential 1 seed in your grasp.
Which team would you say was the .500 team last night?We're around 170th the past 4 games according to Hurley.
Creighton. They had the record that said 13-13 next to their name if you didn't check the Big East standings before the gameWhich team would you say was the .500 team last night?
So then why doesn’t UConn incorporate some kind of zone defense? What if it helps? Coach?Teams are getting to the rack so easy. They are turning the corners on our perimeter defenders on the first move. They can get to the dominate hand on their first move. When Ross came in for Solo he was getting beat the same way. Only difference he makes up ground chasing. We always are chasing from the side or behind which creates an image of us being out of position then we reach. Auto whistle every time. Stop letting your man get behind you and maybe we won’t get called for so many fouls. Whether they are fouls or not.
Because it goes against basically every single principle of the defensive system Dan Hurley has installedSo then why doesn’t UConn incorporate some kind of zone defense? What if it helps? Coach?
You nailed it! I hope they can fix this. Not expecting perfection. Just some moderate improvement can result in a better outcome.Teams are getting to the rack so easy. They are turning the corners on our perimeter defenders on the first move. They can get to the dominate hand on their first move. When Ross came in for Solo he was getting beat the same way. Only difference he makes up ground chasing. We always are chasing from the side or behind which creates an image of us being out of position then we reach. Auto whistle every time. Stop letting your man get behind you and maybe we won’t get called for so many fouls. Whether they are fouls or not.
I know this is perceived as a sign of weakness, but would it make sense to play a little zone once in a while? I mean the other night they were coming down scoring in our faces at will over and over and over again. And frankly other teams like to take free throws against us because they know that we stink at it and they’d love to get into free-throw shooting contest. I would think “one on on” D you’re more likely to foul.We run tight on the perimeter on purpose and it is exceptionally effective. We limit 3s and make getting assists impossible. We high hedge to the same effect and this puts a lot of pressure on the 3 and 4 to help.
Our problem is, frankly, our starting SG can't guard a 3rd-grade girls team. And our bench isn't as deep or talented as we thought. Reibe is pulling his weight overall but struggles with the PnR at times. Stewart and Ross are decent. Malachi tends to be our second worst perimeter defender after Solo IMO.
Frankly that we're ranked the 11th defense in the NCAA is a testament to the effectiveness of the system and just how good of defenders Silas and Tarris have been. Silas is particular is crazy underrated defensively on here. And Tarris leads the conference in defensive rating. Head and tail of the dog are phenomenal.
I know this is perceived as a sign of weakness, but would it make sense to play a little zone once in a while? I mean the other night they were coming down scoring in our faces at will over and over and over again. And frankly other teams like to take free throws against us because they know that we stink at it and they’d love to get into free-throw shooting contest. I would think “one on on” D you’re more likely to foul.
I know Dan would not want to do this, but you kind of got to play with the team that you have not the one that you wish you had. We’re deep into season.
Perfectly stated in personnel and scheme. This portal run should be very interesting.two years in a row where we have a few significant personnel/scheme mismatches.
so either we aren’t making the right personnel decisions, or we aren’t good at adapting the scheme to the personnel we have.
my other 2cents is that I wish Hurley gave a little more rope to guys and prioritized season long outcomes vs. near term wins.
I would rather have given Reibe/Stewart/Ross more minutes to work thru things during the course of the season with the hopes that they can figure things out and we peak late.
But I get it is hard to deny the allure of a potential 1 seed in your grasp.
And yet they won.Creighton. They had the record that said 13-13 next to their name if you didn't check the Big East standings before the game
two years in a row where we have a few significant personnel/scheme mismatches.
so either we aren’t making the right personnel decisions, or we aren’t good at adapting the scheme to the personnel we have.
my other 2cents is that I wish Hurley gave a little more rope to guys and prioritized season long outcomes vs. near term wins.
I would rather have given Reibe/Stewart/Ross more minutes to work thru things during the course of the season with the hopes that they can figure things out and we peak late.
But I get it is hard to deny the allure of a potential 1 seed in your grasp.
Hurley and his staff have every reason to be confident in their coaching abilities and their work is proof of their elite coaching abilities for sure. I also think Hurley needs to be more flexible at times and not think "teams from 2023 and 2024 were able to do this so I know this works" and find what works, or at least what works best, for the current roster he has.two years in a row where we have a few significant personnel/scheme mismatches.
so either we aren’t making the right personnel decisions, or we aren’t good at adapting the scheme to the personnel we have.
my other 2cents is that I wish Hurley gave a little more rope to guys and prioritized season long outcomes vs. near term wins.
I would rather have given Reibe/Stewart/Ross more minutes to work thru things during the course of the season with the hopes that they can figure things out and we peak late.
But I get it is hard to deny the allure of a potential 1 seed in your grasp.
I think you are both correct. There are personnel and scheme mismatches. He cannot have this team play defense they way he would prefer. It's just too easy to isolate UConn's defenders and play 1v1 because the other defenders off the ball are not a few steps off their man which would leave them in better position to help. Mind you, this doesn't mean give shooters enough time for a slow release 3 pt shot on a kick out pass either. I know UConn lacks the athleticism to help and recover consistenly, but the lane is wide open and opposing players can comfortably dribble and deliberately take the UConn defender 1v1. It's been an issue this year, but this issue persisted last year, too. I noticed it in Maui and in the Providence game at Gampel last year when Providence build a 14 pt lead and players like Ryan Mela, Jayden Pierre, and Wesley Cardett Jr. were cooking our UConn defenders 1v1.If you ignore the fact were were 5th in the nation defensively for most of the season this makes sense. But I do not believe it is a personnel problem. Every team has weak defenders. The trick is to minimize their weaknesses. We create our own problems by guarding too closely 30 feet from the basket. It spreads the floor. It opens the middle and it gets us in trouble. When we gamble out there it is a disaster. Fix that and we will look like we did earlier in the season.
^^^ yeah, thatHurley and his staff have every reason to be confident in their coaching abilities and their work is proof of their elite coaching abilities for sure. I also think Hurley needs to be more flexible at times and not think "teams from 2023 and 2024 were able to do this so I know this works" and find what works, or at least what works best, for the current roster he has.
As for giving more rope to the bench players, I wish he did, too, but I completely understand why he didn't. It seems like whenever he brought in the bench guys, the other team would go on a scoring run and remove any lead or increase their lead. The bench players need to show some positive impact when they are in the game, and Hurley kind of called them out in the post game press conference after the Georgetown game in Gampel. He mentioned earlier in the year about how UConn will wear teams down with their intricate offensive sets, by running opposing players off the 3 pt line (not pressure D to cause turnovers), and with their bench and depth. That is not happening because whenever the games are tight he is dialing back the rotations and not including the bench.
I think you are both correct. There are personnel and scheme mismatches. He cannot have this team play defense they way he would prefer. It's just too easy to isolate UConn's defenders and play 1v1 because the other defenders off the ball are not a few steps off their man which would leave them in better position to help. Mind you, this doesn't mean give shooters enough time for a slow release 3 pt shot on a kick out pass either. I know UConn lacks the athleticism to help and recover consistenly, but the lane is wide open and opposing players can comfortably dribble and deliberately take the UConn defender 1v1. It's been an issue this year, but this issue persisted last year, too. I noticed it in Maui and in the Providence game at Gampel last year when Providence build a 14 pt lead and players like Ryan Mela, Jayden Pierre, and Wesley Cardett Jr. were cooking our UConn defenders 1v1.
The bench guys were outscored because they played together and thus who would score? Filter them in with 3 or 4 starters and those runs would not happen.Hurley and his staff have every reason to be confident in their coaching abilities and their work is proof of their elite coaching abilities for sure. I also think Hurley needs to be more flexible at times and not think "teams from 2023 and 2024 were able to do this so I know this works" and find what works, or at least what works best, for the current roster he has.
As for giving more rope to the bench players, I wish he did, too, but I completely understand why he didn't. It seems like whenever he brought in the bench guys, the other team would go on a scoring run and remove any lead or increase their lead. The bench players need to show some positive impact when they are in the game, and Hurley kind of called them out in the post game press conference after the Georgetown game in Gampel. He mentioned earlier in the year about how UConn will wear teams down with their intricate offensive sets, by running opposing players off the 3 pt line (not pressure D to cause turnovers), and with their bench and depth. That is not happening because whenever the games are tight he is dialing back the rotations and not including the bench.
I think you are both correct. There are personnel and scheme mismatches. He cannot have this team play defense they way he would prefer. It's just too easy to isolate UConn's defenders and play 1v1 because the other defenders off the ball are not a few steps off their man which would leave them in better position to help. Mind you, this doesn't mean give shooters enough time for a slow release 3 pt shot on a kick out pass either. I know UConn lacks the athleticism to help and recover consistenly, but the lane is wide open and opposing players can comfortably dribble and deliberately take the UConn defender 1v1. It's been an issue this year, but this issue persisted last year, too. I noticed it in Maui and in the Providence game at Gampel last year when Providence build a 14 pt lead and players like Ryan Mela, Jayden Pierre, and Wesley Cardett Jr. were cooking our UConn defenders 1v1.
So if this is the only defense they know why shouldn't they overplay the offensive player and force him to go to the other hand. Perhaps if we did more of that and kept someone in the paint to shot block/rebound we might have a better chance to keep opponents honest. I think it is disturbing and hard headed to say a zone is not an option. That's closed minded if true. You're playing right into the opponent coaches hands. This is going to be interesting to see how it plays out the rest of the season. It reminds me of the time a few years back when Kadary Richmond was playing for Seton Hall against us and must have driven down the lane 7-8 times with no adjustment. It looked ridiculous.You nailed it! I hope they can fix this. Not expecting perfection. Just some moderate improvement can result in a better outcome.
Exactly. I have been saying he needs to stagger the substitutions instead of bringing 3 off the bench at a time.The bench guys were outscored because they played together and thus who would score? Filter them in with 3 or 4 starters and those runs would not happen.
Yes we just watched St. John's defend well against Creighton's 3 pt shooting without getting stretched too thin. They are much more athletic than UConn and can help and recover so well.Watched Cincy playi great man to man defense vs Kansas by not covering tight way above the 3pt line and winning on road