Sugar Bear 16
Well-known member
CaliGriz55 said:I was just passing though, trying to figure out how the Griz lost to the Cats, and came across this post. I feel like I should shed some insider information. As a person who was in the room for this so called "Bribe", maybe it will help.
For starters it wasn't a bribe. It was a drastic change in thought. Holst was too conservative on offense to run the type of system he was using. He ran a basic motion offense, but would teach his team to pull out and reset with 15 seconds on the shot clock, as the offense reset so would the defense, so instead of pressing the defense for the duration of the shot clock (grinding them until they broke down mentally or physically) we would allow the defense to relax and regroup. Also, since our "Quick Hitters" where basically Horns, Zipper, Single Double, and Pick the Picker (also known as America's Play) we became too one dimensional and easy to scout for D1 programs. To make a long story short, we had a playbook that looked like "Coaching College Basketball for Dummies".
For those that still don't understand how conservative Holst is as a head coach take this example, during one film session prepping for a road game against Gonzaga he stopped the tape 15 to 20 times to point out how fast Gonzaga's opponent shot the ball and how many bad shots they took, which was a little bizarre since we where playing Gonzaga and not Gonzaga's opponent. In case you where wondering that team was Illinois. They where ranked number 1 in the nation at the time. They had 5 guys go to the NBA. This conservative mindset would lead us to some pretty sketchy coaching decisions, like zoning Northern Iowa, a team with 5 dead eye set shooters, but couldn't outrun my high school squad. If you remember we where down 55-15 at the half. I can't forget. Also, he created this ridiculous match-up zone that 5th year seniors didn't fully understand because our starting center didn't have to foot speed to move short corner to short corner.
Basically, he had one of the most talented/ athletic teams in Griz history (Slyder, a healthy Brent Cummings, Dave Bell, Dan Trammel, Scoot). His "Bribe" was just to let all of his athletes know that they could be aggressive without worrying about getting yanked, and talent took over. Also he took Tinkle's advice and benched Sam Riddle. I know he's a Missoula boy, but he was a selfish cancer. There was one person who wasn't celebrating after Dan jumped over his defender to tip dunk the game winner against the Cats, don't believe me check the tape, he didn't move an inch. Scooter also took leadership of that team, changing most of the plays that Holst would call. Being the son of a NAVY Seal, he was composed enough to make rational decisions in pressure moments, like sending Dave Bell off triple screens (a play he designed himself, partially based on a dream he had) when Dave would get hot and isolating Dan Tram in the post when the Cats would try to guard him with some of their less athletic players.
Holst strong suits where in his attention to detail, particularly in film scouting and preparation. He would produce some of the most detailed, organized, and disciplined scouting reports and film sessions I have seen in my career. Where he suffered was in-game decision making and adjustments, particularly in pressure situations. Sadly, basketball in a fluid, fast moving spot, and coaches get paid to make the tough decisions in pressure moments.
Just my thoughts.
Knows first hand and has Holst pegged pretty good and Sam Riddle pegged even better.