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I have played basketball all my life, and unless you played D1, you haven’t played at a higher level than I have. So gimme a break with you knowing basketball bs. Even if you did play at a higher level, you’re still incorrect. “And trusted to put the ball on the floor more”? Brother, if you can consistently put the ball on the floor, no coach in their right mind would stop you from doing so, it opens the entire game up. That is just such a silly statement.Again, I do not care what you all who’ve never played basketball say about whether what I’m observing is wrong or not.
The kid used to be able to slash just fine. When he came here he had Newton, Cam, Castle, Diarra, and Karaban all ahead of him as far as guys Hurley trusted to put the ball on the floor and take it to the rim.
With, what I hope, is well known about Hurley’s hesitancy to trust non one and done freshman, Solo was not going to have many chances or rope to make drives to the rim. Hurley talked up his shooting his whole freshman year because that was his role and what he wanted him to do.
So it shouldn’t be a surprise that after a year of not working on this skill it’s rusty. Does he even work on it if Liam doesn’t get hurt to make him have to do more than be a shooter?
Hurley has a lot of positives that obviously result in winning a lot. But he’s not perfect and we don’t have to be obtuse about this.
I’d venture a guess that it is the first game of Solo’s college career he led the team in assists. And that was with Diarra out and McNeeley scoring at will. Solo was comp’d with Russ because of body type and athleticism, that is where their comparisons END. Anyone with a basketball mind and a set of eyes can see that. Solo plays literally nothing like Russ.
I want to tackle everything in that post because it just goes against any type of coaching protocol at a high level, but it seems unnecessary to rub dirt in it.