ThisWell expect a lot of pick and rolls with Daniels screening then. If Ejim is defending Daniels he will have to hedge, switch or give up the drive most times. Assuming ISU isn't playing zone.
ThisWell expect a lot of pick and rolls with Daniels screening then. If Ejim is defending Daniels he will have to hedge, switch or give up the drive most times. Assuming ISU isn't playing zone.
This is where I see the loss of Niang hurting Iowa State the most in the interior offensive end. Niang has an "old man" game featuring a lot of pump fakes, hook and up and under shots. Hogue and company will need to step it up inside to open the perimeter guys up if Iowa State wants to win.Brimah's primary value is not the shots he blocks, it's the shot he changes. He is also very fast for a guy his size. So when you think he is out of the play, he isn't.
Hogue will shoot enough to keep the defense honest and to draw the big man outside and no he will pull the trigger even if not wide open. As expected he hits a much higher percentage if left open. This is why teams have to honor him on the perimeter. Brimah had one block against Villanova (although I thought I saw two) because Villanova spread things out and drew him out of the lane. ISU will try the same except ISU will move the ball and try to penetrate instead of chucking up contested threes. Not saying it will work but just saying what I expect to see
Hogue and Ejim are different than Daniels in they have been playing against the other teams 5 a lot. Imagine a player like Brimah guarding Daniels. Brimah would have to come out on the perimeter to defend Daniels. Hogue and Ejim are very similar to Daniels. He is a little taller and longer. Teams like Kansas, Texas, Michigan, Iowa, Baylor(before the zone)etc all saw their 7'0 out defending the perimeter. If they make one of their first two then they will shoot 40-60%. If they miss the first two, the defense can sag but they will keep shooting and rely on rebounding
Brimah had one block versus 'Nova, but he altered a good many more. Remember, before Okafor (2002-2004), UConn was not a huge shot blocking team. But the centers (Knight and Voskuhl, mainly) still played great interior D because they were 9 feet tall from the floor to the tip of their fingers. They were goal keepers who altered the comfort level of their opponent, not shot blockers. They made them change their shot.
The second thing, as you point out, is that Nova didn't drive on Brimah was in. They took jump shots.
Finally, that statement that I highlighted in bold is not necessarily true. I foresee a lot of switching, especially if ISU uses pick and roll.
Incidently, Embiid didn't play in the conference tournament, and ISU lost the other two match ups.
Texas and Michigan don't have a 7 footer on their roster.
And Iowa St was 6-4 in games vs. the above mentioned.
I'm not saying it won't be a hard fought game, but ISU is not head a shoulders above UConn by any stretch of the imagination.
Well expect a lot of pick and rolls with Daniels screening then. If Ejim is defending Daniels he will have to hedge, switch or give up the drive most times. Assuming ISU isn't playing zone.
If I implied ISU was head and shoulders above UConn, I apologize. That is not what I am implying and I have never stated as much. I expect this to be a great game. I am just saying.Brimah had one block versus 'Nova, but he altered a good many more. Remember, before Okafor (2002-2004), UConn was not a huge shot blocking team. But the centers (Knight and Voskuhl, mainly) still played great interior D because they were 9 feet tall from the floor to the tip of their fingers. They were goal keepers who altered the comfort level of their opponent, not shot blockers. They made them change their shot.
The second thing, as you point out, is that Nova didn't drive on Brimah was in. They took jump shots.
Finally, that statement that I highlighted in bold is not necessarily true. I foresee a lot of switching, especially if ISU uses pick and roll.
Incidently, Embiid didn't play in the conference tournament, and ISU lost the other two match ups.
Texas and Michigan don't have a 7 footer on their roster.
And Iowa St was 6-4 in games vs. the above mentioned.
I'm not saying it won't be a hard fought game, but ISU is not head a shoulders above UConn by any stretch of the imagination.
Edozie took two shots against UNC and Gibson has played 2 minutes. What makes you think Fred will pound it to either of those tw0 inside?I agree. These teams are pretty evenly matched. I could see Coach Hoiberg trying to pound Edozie or even Percy Gibson inside on Brimah early in an attempt to get him in foul trouble. If not, I would expect a heavy dose of driving and kicking out for shots.
Brimah's biggest contribution tonight won't be in his block total but like as been stated, his ability to alter shots. If Iowa State is unable to score in the interior, they better be on from deep or it could be a long night.
Brimah had one block versus 'Nova, but he altered a good many more. Remember, before Okafor (2002-2004), UConn was not a huge shot blocking team. But the centers (Knight and Voskuhl, mainly) still played great interior D because they were 9 feet tall from the floor to the tip of their fingers. They were goal keepers who altered the comfort level of their opponent, not shot blockers. They made them change their shot.
The second thing, as you point out, is that Nova didn't drive on Brimah was in. They took jump shots.
Finally, that statement that I highlighted in bold is not necessarily true. I foresee a lot of switching, especially if ISU uses pick and roll.
Incidently, Embiid didn't play in the conference tournament, and ISU lost the other two match ups.
Texas and Michigan don't have a 7 footer on their roster.
And Iowa St was 6-4 in games vs. the above mentioned.
I'm not saying it won't be a hard fought game, but ISU is not head a shoulders above UConn by any stretch of the imagination.
This!I'd guess they'd play some sort of match up or zone or switch between a diamond and one or a 3-2 zone with Ejim and Hogue in the paint. I can't imagine they'd play man all game. Odds are you'll see them try and deny UConn hanging out in the paint and take their odds on outside shots.
Both offenses, while run at different speeds, are pretty similar pro types and move the ball around through screens and passes to either draw a mismatch or an isolation when a double occurs. I think what will be key in this game is who can generate the most mismatches, not who can guard who better. For instance it won't be that Ejim can stop Daniels or vice versa, it will be if UConn can get Daniels matched up with Kane or Iowa State can get Boat guarding Kane on a switch that will lead to higher percentage shots.
If I implied ISU was head and shoulders above UConn, I apologize. That is not what I am implying and I have never stated as much. I expect this to be a great game. I am just saying.
Texas and Michigan don't have 7'0" but they do have 6'10" guys that
I see a KU team with Embiid as better than UConn. Much better. However we will be playing UConn without Niang so that is why I think this will be a very good game.
And UConn is not KU with Embiid. No disrespect meant But KU with Embiid is a National Championship team. IMO, Embiid is better on both ends of the floor than Brimah and yet ISU was within two possessions and had chances to win both of those games. But like you said that was with Niang. I don't think you see much different from ISU with Niang out. They will still try to create mismatches but they won't have a consistent scoring threat down low on the post6-4 with Niang. ISU is a completely different team without him. It's unknown if that means better or worse when related to UConn. They may be a better shooting team without him. Maybe less dynamic. Maybe worse defensively. Maybe quicker. Etc.
FfldCntyFan said:The way you've been talking about ISU I really want to know how anyone beat them.
In particular, I can't believe a mediocre WVU team dropped a hundred on them. But he says to ignore that game so maybe they were working on new sets or something. I'm sure they would have won if they tried to.
In particular, I can't believe a mediocre WVU team dropped a hundred on them. But he says to ignore that game so maybe they were working on new sets or something. I'm sure they would have won if they tried to.
Because they were on the road. ISU SUCKS on the road even with Niang, and unfortunately for them tonight isn't being played at Hilton. ....
FWIW-Kansas is the only team that beat ISU more than once. Kansas is the only team to beat ISU not on their home court or a neutral court. Of course, that was with Niang. But yeah, ISU started 14-0 and their only losses other than KU were on the road in conference in the toughest league against teams and coaches that are familiar with the players and their game. And every game but two, were close games. So yeah.The way you've been talking about ISU I really want to know how anyone beat them.
Because they were on the road. ISU SUCKS on the road even with Niang, and unfortunately for them tonight isn't being played at Hilton. Let's break down their last 8 road games:
So let's recap. The only two road wins ISU had since January were against bad teams during HORRIBLE ruts, with Niang, and this is what they are hanging their hats on?
- Loss by 5 @ Oklahoma (the Oklahoma that got run by North Dakota State)
- Loss by 10 @Texas
- Loss by 11 @ Kansas (which is being counted as "close")
- Win by 1 @ OSU (in 3OT, in the middle of OSU's 7 game losing streak)
- Loss by 25 @ WVU (that got bounced in the first round of the NIT)
- Win by 11 @ TCU (in the middle of TCU's 19 straight losses to end the season - in fact this was the closest game they had played from the end of December against Texas Southern until the last game of the year when they lost by 8 to Baylor)
- Loss by 7 @ KSU
- Loss by 13 @ Baylor
And UConn is not KU with Embiid. No disrespect meant But KU with Embiid is a National Championship team. IMO, Embiid is better on both ends of the floor than Brimah and yet ISU was within two possessions and had chances to win both of those games. But like you said that was with Niang. I don't think you see much different from ISU with Niang out. They will still try to create mismatches but they won't have a consistent scoring threat down low on the post
Technically speaking, Iowa State's last 5 games have been "on the road" (Big12 tournament and NCAA tournament). Results are as follows:
Kansas State / Win 91-85
Kansas / Win 94-83
Baylor / Win 74-65
NCC / Win 93-75
UNC / Win 85-83
FWIW-Kansas is the only team that beat ISU more than once. Kansas is the only team to beat ISU not on their home court or a neutral court. Of course, that was with Niang. But yeah, ISU started 14-0 and their only losses other than KU were on the road in conference in the toughest league against teams and coaches that are familiar with the players and their game. And every game but two, were close games. So yeah.
The way teams beat us.....
KU- Flat out more talented up and down the roster. They have two lottery pics and Tharpe played out of his mind in Ames. @KU is just damn hard place to win
OU- on the road- Outrebounded us. Spangler was a stud with 7 offensive rebounds and 15 boards. 2nd chance points killed us Heild had 22 on 6-12 from 3
Texas-on the road-Holmes and Ridley combined for 39 points down low. Felix Amari DeBerry another 17
West Virgina-ugh- just pounded us physically and took out out of the game from tip off
Kansas St- undefeated at home in conference play and again pounded us physically
Baylor- their zone really killed us. It was the first time we faced it and it eliminated all mismatches ISU likes to create
ISU lost to teams that could pound the ball low on the road. With teams that could force us to double team the post we lost on the road but won at home(except KU). It is as simple as that.
Of course we also beat those types of teams at home and on neutral court.
Again, I think this will be a great game and it is a toss up. I am meerly one fan that is responding when someone says...Daniels will do this, Brimah will do that, Shabazz will do this. I am just trying to relay what ISU does to respond. That doesn't mean I think it will work.
You won four away games during the regular season. Two were against teams that you should beat handily in TCU and TT.
The other two (BYU and OKSt) were by a combined 3 points and included one 3OT game. Basically ISU was 2 buckets from having zero quality road wins. But seriously it's impressive to win close games on the road.
Both teams are very similar in that regard, neither has a very impressive road record. Its not like one win against Memphis on the road is a badge of honor different than one win against Oklahoma State on the road, unless the difference between an eight and nine seed is a big deal.
Tourney Teams played on the road/neutral court since Jan-1:
ISU (Faced 8 TT): 6-5 (Kansas 1-1, KSU, 1-1, Baylor, 1-1, Oklahoma State 1-0, Texas 0-1, Oklahoma 0-1, NCC 1-0, UNC 1-0)
UConn (Faced 5 TT): 5-3 (Memphis 2-0, Louisville 0-2, Cinci 1-1, St Joes 1-0, Villanova 1-0)
I'd call this argument a wash.
You won four away games during the regular season. Two were against teams that you should beat handily in TCU and TT.
The other two (BYU and OKSt) were by a combined 3 points and included one 3OT game. Basically ISU was 2 buckets from having zero quality road wins. But seriously it's impressive to win close games on the road.
Both teams are very similar in that regard, neither has a very impressive road record. Its not like one win against Memphis on the road is a badge of honor different than one win against Oklahoma State on the road, unless the difference between an eight and nine seed is a big deal.
Tourney Teams played on the road/neutral court since Jan-1:
ISU (Faced 8 TT): 6-5 (Kansas 1-1, KSU, 1-1, Baylor, 1-1, Oklahoma State 1-0, Texas 0-1, Oklahoma 0-1, NCC 1-0, UNC 1-0)
UConn (Faced 5 TT): 5-3 (Memphis 2-0, Louisville 0-2, Cinci 1-1, St Joes 1-0, Villanova 1-0)
I'd call this argument a wash.
Fair enough but imo some posters are putting waaayyy too much stock into the "home court advantage" tonight. Obviously UConn will have the tonight when it comes to the majority of fans but it simply isn't a "home game". They aren't playing on the court they normally play on, there will be Iowa State, Virginia and Michigan State fans as well.
Sure UConn will have more fans there (duh) but it's not like the students are going to be down low, "swarming" the court.
Would the loss at WVU would have held more weight if WVU was a better team? If WVU was somehow good enough to make the field you would be .500 but since they weren't you have a winning (barely) record in your comparison (that also includes powerhouse NCC). If the WVU team that waxed you was good enough to make the field (instead of being the mediocrity that they were) would ISU suddenly be a lesser team? I'm trying to figure out how this works.