pinotbear
Silly Ol' Bear
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
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1. Until Maya came to Storrs, UConn was 2-5 against North Carolina. The record now stands at 6-5. Was Coach Auriemma being outcoached by Coach Hatchell or did Coach Hatchell have better players?
2. One of UConn's losses to North Carolina was in the 1994 Elite Eight game when UConn as the #1 seed lost to #3 seeded North Carolina who went on to win the national championship. Was Coach Auriemma outcoached in that game? This was pretty much the same UConn team, the exact same starting lineup, that went undefeated the following season; A darn good UConn team.
The answers lie somewhere at and between both extremes. Getting outcoached is a fan/pundit argument as is all the second guessing we tend/love to do. The fact is Delaware beat North Carolina because they played better basketball on Tuesday night. Tierra Ruffin-Pratt, who scored 30 points in the previous tournamanet game against Albany, scored a mere 4 points on 1-13 against Delaware. It does not matter what defensive matchups Coach Hatchell orchestrated, if your senior leader does not show up in a big game, then you are general fighting a war with limited artillery.
This is the kind of post I really like, and respect: puts out a well-phrased position, and backs in with facts, unemotionally. It also taught me something I didn't know, as recent UNC games had colored my perception of the "balance of power" as well.
I would add three things. There's always the possibility that a coach, no matter how accomplished, doesn't keep up with how the game changes & develops - examples might include Summitt & C Viv on the offensive end of the floor. A coach might just lose their fire for the job or aspects of the job - examples might include Foster & recruiting at Ohio State (certainly, Hatchell has not slipped in recruiting!). Lastly, a coach just may come across as less-than-gracious in defeat or dissappointment, and therebye make fans think lesser of them. It also puts their program in the spotlight after a defeat, so fans associate the team with losing efforts. Hatchell (and, to a degree, Portland) might fall into this category.