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Posted by Trips Right on October 27th, 2009 under Basketball
Shooters? Check. Ball handlers? Check. Scorers? Check. Size, length, athleticism? You betcha. Experienced backcourt? Eh, not so much. Sure, I’m picking nits here, but in the context of a national championship run, nits can bite you in the ass. Case in point can be found in the 1994 National Title game. With a minute or so to go and the Duke Blue Devils nursing a two point lead, freshman point guard Jeff Capel picks up a loose ball and has a two on one with Grant Hill on the wing for an easy bucket and a commanding two possession cushion with under a minute to go. Ballgame right? Wrong. Instead of making the easy play, Capel airmails a behind the back pass six rows up. The Hogs come down and Scottie Thurman hits a rainbow 3 over the outstretched arm of Antonio Lang to put the Razorbacks up 1. And the rest, as they say, is history.
My point? Well, my point is that Duke had everything Texas has today, including a lack of experience in the backcourt. Now Duke mitigated that inexperience much of the year by playing senior Grant Hill as a point forward, but eventually their youthful backcourt caught up with them, and unfortunately for freshman guard Jeff Capel, it happened on the biggest stage at the worst possible time.
As for Texas, there really isn’t an experienced playmaking option outside of Balbay and Lucas. And since there are only so many minutes in a ballgame, playing these two comes at the expense of costing your more talented guards minutes and opportunities to produce. I’m not saying it’s a given that Brown and Bradley should get the bulk of the minutes by default, especially if they prove they’re not more productive than their more experienced counterparts. But if preseason observations and reports are accurate, the younger cats like Brown, Bradley, and Hamilton need to get the preponderance of the minutes in order for Texas to be at its best. And the downside to that includes freshman mistakes like bad shots, ill advised passes, lack of understanding of time/place/score and game situations.
Hence, youthful concerns.
Overcoming Issues of Youth
Coaching. Well, no shit, you say, but bear with me a moment. Sure, 90% of coaching is eliminating correctable mistakes and with this kind of youth, there will be a bunch of things that need to be corrected. Rest assured that Rick Barnes understands the youth issue on his team and he will adjust his practices accordingly. These kids have been playing ball year round and have largely done so in mostly an undisciplined environment. Pickup games, AAU games, and tournaments don’t require a heightened awareness of time and score or game situation recognition. It’s pretty much get buckets and don’t give them up, lest your home boys clown you. If my club is up 4 with a minute to play, I’m not worried about running clock and finding a good shot, especially if I can cross this sucker over and rise up over him for a feathery J with John Calipari looking on. And that’s the mentality that Barnes will have to guard against and coach to. Look for Rick to spend larger portions in practice on game situations on both ends of the floor. Rick’s scrimmages will be interrupted by many more coaching whistles than at any other point in his tenure at Texas. Bank on it. Barnes has the unenviable task of teaching scorers to be combo guards and teaching combo guards to be floor leaders.
Sets. Sure, Barnes’ claim to fame is a Phoenix Sun style random screen game that puts the onus on players to make plays, and that’s fine for most ballgames. But there will be times during a contest when Rick will need to put a governor on the race car’s engine and he’ll likely do this with sets. Sets designed to stop runs, milk clock, get two for ones, or get certain players involved. Sets offer a great way to take pressure off inexperienced point guards while controlling offense from the bench. And if your sets break down, you iso your best scorer to go one on one and find offense. There’s almost zero downside to them when you have the talent Texas has.
Situational Substitutions. Don’t be surprised to see Balbay and Lucas in at crucial points in ballgames. Points when game situation awareness is at a premium. Need a fourth foul on the other team’s big, Balbay and Lucas may be more likely to get Pittman involved. Need to run clock on offense or slow the pace down, Balbay may be your man instead of Brown. Need to close a game with smart play and good foul shooting, look for Lucas to get the nod.
Experience Advantage
One final thought on the fatal flaw that an inexperienced backcourt can be on a program. I take Texas’ talent and depth over any team in the nation. We’ve talked about how the Horns are just sick with ballers at every position. I would even go as far as to say Kentucky is right up there from a talent standpoint. But make no mistake about it, upper echelon teams like Villanova, Michigan State, and Kansas have an advantage over younger teams like Texas and Kentucky because they have experienced floor leaders. Collins, Lucas, and Reynolds are guards that have been tested by hundreds of collegiate game situations.
These players, without question, know the correct play to make in the important context of time and score. It’s an advantage that basketball fans shouldn’t discount when prognosticating the upcoming season. I can assure you this aspect of the game isn’t lost on the Longhorn coaching staff. If Texas can get these young ones to do some growing up in a hurry through practice, scrimmaging, coaching, and pull the right strings with experienced players at critical points in the ballgame, Texas can minimize the youth factor and get to where they want to get.
And remember, when you find yourself leading a two on one break, just make an easy bounce pass and win the national championship.
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It appears the NCAA intends to expand its annual basketball tournament to a ludicrous 96 teams. Nearly 100 teams, competing in a single-elimination tournament to crown a champion. March Madness, indeed.
Money is obviously the motivating factor here. The NCAA makes cash hand-over-fist during tournament time, and there’s a certain simple-minded economic logic behind
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Bob – What is the cut of the Maryland fan’s jib? Hanging Gary in effigy? They were robbed?
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I think Udoh is more like Gonzo than a Prawn from District 9 – but tha’ts not bad.
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I didn’t watch all the games you guys played all year but yesterday’s game seemed to me to hinge on the ineffectiveness of Sherron. really sad for that guy as he’s a baller. I think Ojanb Bob said this over at BC too. He just couldn’t get it done on either
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Welcome, Adam. What a freaking win today. Amazing game.
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Third and fourth bullets are good stuff.
Good to be able to admit fault and correct it.
This game next year could be an ESPN Game Day special and if so, you’re taking me.
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Nate,
Missed the point, but par for the course. I’ll go back to my developmentally challenged assistance home and cry.
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Good to have you back on the keycaps, ded.
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RRR commented on the blog post Spring Preview: Texas Tech Offense 2 hours, 30 minutes ago
I agree the RG position will be the most interesting development of the Spring. Last year Okafor couldn’t drive block and couldn’t run in the open field on screen plays. If he’s not physically capable of losing weight and improving, I want to know who will replace him. Suh and McCoy may
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I wish they weren’t playing Kentucky next. Same goes for #11 seed Washington having to play West Virginia.
Sucks that we are getting the two best teams left in the tourney playing in the Elite 8 possibly.
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Okay, gloves off.
No stats, no recaps, none of that.
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With Leach at the wheel I was expecting a 10 win minimum season with the guys this team has coming back in 2010. Now with Tubbs, Willis, and Brown running the show I’m in agreement it’s anywhere between 9-12 wins this year.
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No Kalin Lucas?
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ghostofagroundgame commented on the blog post Best Opening Round I Can Remember 9 hours, 56 minutes ago
This really has been a great start. It’s pretty exciting to see dark horse teams winning by playing solid basketball rather than just shooting the lights out. 4 year players are so key.
Bob in Houston commented on the blog post Best Opening Round I Can Remember 9 hours, 58 minutes ago
And nobody melts down like Maryland fans. I can’t even post some of the stuff they have spewed.
dick commented on the blog post Best Opening Round I Can Remember 10 hours, 45 minutes ago
Hopefully, yall caught the Maryland Michigan St ending. Freakin’ thrilling. Maryland almost pulled off a comeback for the ages.
officially the best opening weekend ever
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Tom Izzo can coach some ball.
Patrick Bateman commented on the blog post NCAA Tournament Open Thread: Weekend Edition 10 hours, 51 minutes ago
MSU at the buzzer!!!!!!
Patrick Bateman commented on the blog post NCAA Tournament Open Thread: Weekend Edition 10 hours, 53 minutes ago
Fear the Turtle! Came all the way back from a dozen down to take the lead on MSU…
D W commented on the blog post Best Opening Round I Can Remember 11 hours ago
It’s incredible how few teams play good, fundamental basketball.
Patrick Bateman commented on the blog post NCAA Tournament Open Thread: Weekend Edition 11 hours, 4 minutes ago
tOSU will be moving on. Evan Turner does a little of everything. 22 pts, 8 reb, 8 ass. Great player.
Patrick Bateman commented on the blog post NCAA Tournament Open Thread: Weekend Edition 11 hours, 4 minutes ago
tOSU will be moving on. Evan Turner does a little of everything. 22 pts, 8 reb, 8 ast. Great player.
Patrick Bateman commented on the blog post NCAA Tournament Open Thread: Weekend Edition 11 hours, 10 minutes ago
Bob Huggins looks like a guy I wouldn’t want to play for. He makes Barnes look like Dick Vermeil….
Scipio Tex commented on the blog post Best Opening Round I Can Remember 11 hours, 12 minutes ago
Scratch that. The Big Red are blowing Wisconsin out.
Patrick Bateman commented on the blog post NCAA Tournament Open Thread: Weekend Edition 11 hours, 14 minutes ago
I’d be happy to see the last two minutes of the OSU/Tech game. 4 pt game with just under two minutes.
Cornell putting it to the Bo Ryan’s….
Scipio Tex commented on the blog post Best Opening Round I Can Remember 11 hours, 41 minutes ago
Cornell is playing phenomenally well. I’d be surprised if Wiscy doesn’t cut into the lead in the 2nd half.
Jay Bilas may end up looking like a genius.
admin commented on the blog post Best Opening Round I Can Remember 11 hours, 56 minutes ago
parlin – Shoot me an email sailorripley at barkingcarnival dot com.
© 2009 Fantake. All rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.
anonymous said:
October 27th, 2009 at 1:20 pm
Balbay will have to show some ability to make free throws if he is going to be the answer at point when Texas needs to run clock.
Hiphopopotamus said:
October 27th, 2009 at 1:22 pm
I think you’re off by about a decade.
Trips Right said:
October 27th, 2009 at 1:24 pm
Good call. Grant Hill isn’t 25 is he? But then again, who is?
Trips Right said:
October 27th, 2009 at 1:25 pm
anonymous, that’s a good observation and why I made Lucas my closer instead of Doge. Doge can run my offense up until the 3 minute mark.
scagnetti said:
October 27th, 2009 at 1:45 pm
thanks trips, THIS my friend, is the post ive been looking for…
that written, my concern is still on that AAU-kind of mentality. brown is SAID to be unselfish. Lucas is SAID to have game management genes, and we know Dog can dribble-drive out of trouble at times. BUT what prevents Rick from going DEEP into his bench and pull out Mason for home-bled minutes?
maybe im being paranoid, but that capel-hill scenario is EXACTLY how i see us losing in OT to Kansas not once or twice but THREE times!!!
thanks again, great wrieup
Trips Right said:
October 27th, 2009 at 2:02 pm
Scag, thanks, and your point about Mason is a great one. Mason has skins on the wall as a 3rd guard running the point. Flank him with Hamilton and Bradley, and he’ll likely make the opposing team’s third best perimeter defender look foolish. The problem with Justin as I see it, is his entire game regressed last season. It wasn’t just ball handling, it was shooting, defense, psychology, the whole nine. If there’s an underlying issue, I don’t know that I’d trust him at the point for signficant minutes. If last year was a hiccup and he’s showing signs that he’s back to his sophomore form, then he’s a viable option as an experienced floor general for stretches.
texoz said:
October 27th, 2009 at 2:28 pm
Coach Barnes has a lot of important conversions with individual players and what their roles should be for the upcoming season.
Maybe the biggest conversion is related directly to your post. I’m guessing that he’s telling Mason that he’ll be losing PT, but that some of his minutes may be the most important minutes in Longhorn basketball history. Minutes where you need an experienced player to finish a game not by trying to score lots of points, but by controlling the final minutes.
Bob in Houston said:
October 27th, 2009 at 2:43 pm
I saw too much “deer-in-headlights” play from Mason last year to think that he would have the ball in his hands in the last five minutes. But that’s just me.
bigdukesix said:
October 27th, 2009 at 3:54 pm
Isn’t Kentucky the team with all of the talent*, not Memphis?
*Assuming they all become eligible.
Good post though.
Trips Right said:
October 27th, 2009 at 4:12 pm
F’ me. Kentucky is right.
scagnetti said:
October 27th, 2009 at 5:49 pm
yeah, I thought Trips reverted back to two years ago for a second there…
Mason/Ward?
Bob’s right, deer in the headlights is right. Ward, however, never flinched with Duke. But he won’t be called on to do THAT again.
I think I see Mason FINISHING most of the games until mid January, with Brown and then with Lucas, as I think RB will go small to finish, let Dex and Damion sit for the last 10+ mins of blowouts.
Maybe let Mason be a floor coach for those two dudes. DOGUS BALBAY, I predict, will not be on the floor when regulation ends at all, Mason, again, however, WILL…
not that it matters
scagnetti said:
October 27th, 2009 at 5:52 pm
and I think we all know John Wall may not play at all this season….
SkyMonkeyHorn said:
October 27th, 2009 at 7:27 pm
Moving Justin to the PG screwed his mind up last year, why would RB give rainman the ball ?
If Dog, Little J, JCB can not handle the PG spot, Ward, Avery and Jordan can do it. Going to your 7th option at PG is not an option.
Please no one say Shawn W. three X. Oops make that two x.
Orbea said:
October 27th, 2009 at 7:53 pm
As a general observation, the issue about youth making mistakes at critical times is spot on. However in specific, when I think about Barnes and freshman, I just don’t remember Ford or DJ blowing plays at the end of games. I suspect that Brown and Bradley will be similar by the end of the season.
Sailor Ripley said:
October 27th, 2009 at 8:50 pm
Orbea -
I think that’s what Trips is saying. TJ and DJ ran the point their whole lives. Our guys will be learning that a bit.
And with that point Trips, this is a bit troubling to me:
I like the concept of this but late in games the organic flow of hoops may present problems. It’s nice to have a TJ or DJ. We’ll see how these youngsters do.
Great write up!
sa said:
October 27th, 2009 at 9:39 pm
haha…some of y’all are acting like Mason is a decent FT shooter. 53% is better than Dog, hardly money. I reckon it’ll be Lucas.
also, all signs point to Bradley having stones the size of the empire state building and a fairly respectable basketball IQ. he may end up with the ball in his hands at the end of games.
dedfischer said:
October 29th, 2009 at 11:02 am
I never really said this to your face, Trips, but growing up in the Panhandle, I was always under the impression basketball was a high school girls sport.
Trips Right said:
October 29th, 2009 at 1:07 pm
Well growing up in El Paso and getting to play teams from the Panhandle, I can confirm your suspicions.
dedfischer said:
October 29th, 2009 at 1:13 pm
You wanted no part of Plainview or Pampa.
dedfischer said:
October 29th, 2009 at 1:14 pm
My favorite action was the box score from a Canyon/Levelland girls game. First one to 20 wins.