IdaGriz01
Well-known member
I know we talked about the importance of foul shooting earlier, but the thread was buried so deep I couldn't find if.
Just watched the end of the Temple-Miami game at the NIT. Temple had it within reach at the end, and were making a run. Then a player (62% foul shooter for the season) stepped to the line after being fouled in the act of shooting -- so, of course, he gets two shots. (Neither team was in the double bonus.) If he makes both, we're at the trading-baskets vs stops mode. This dodo absolutely clanked both shots ... we got to see multiple angles of his terrible foul shooting technique (and this guy was a junior, if I heard right).
You could almost see the air go out of Temple. Miami was dumb enough to give Temple a chance at a last-second trey, but really the game seemed over after the (badly) missed FT. The way games are played at the end now, I just do not understand how a coach would leave a player on the court when he can't make foul shots.
Just watched the end of the Temple-Miami game at the NIT. Temple had it within reach at the end, and were making a run. Then a player (62% foul shooter for the season) stepped to the line after being fouled in the act of shooting -- so, of course, he gets two shots. (Neither team was in the double bonus.) If he makes both, we're at the trading-baskets vs stops mode. This dodo absolutely clanked both shots ... we got to see multiple angles of his terrible foul shooting technique (and this guy was a junior, if I heard right).
You could almost see the air go out of Temple. Miami was dumb enough to give Temple a chance at a last-second trey, but really the game seemed over after the (badly) missed FT. The way games are played at the end now, I just do not understand how a coach would leave a player on the court when he can't make foul shots.