PlayerRep said:
MGR, not one poster in this thread has made a realistic suggestion for improvement, in my view. Most just complain or provide their observations. Hammer is not correct. The team has terrific chemistry, and it doesn't lack heart. I go to the games. I know the coaches and the players. I played two college sports. I know what chemistry and heart are.
Yes, the team should be playing better, and be more consistent. The team has good talent and good potential. they've had some good wins. They generally play good defense. I think they will improve and get on a roll. They have played fairly well at home (I missed the NC game, so don't know what happened there). It's tough to win on the road in the Big Sky. They need to get more aggressive and try to take it to the opponents on the road. They need to find a way to win more of the road games. Give them a chance. Support them. They are good kids. I think their goal is to be hitting on all cylinders by tourney time. They might just surprise you about that time.
It hasn't been all rosey for the team. Selvig has missed playing and practice time, and still has issues. Qvale's dad has been seriously ill. He missed some games, and has presumably been distracted a bit at times. Both Banny and Staudacher have had back problems. Taylor was out with a shoulder injury. He is now having to deal with a shooting hand issue, which requires taping.
I'm sorry, but McGillis, Banny and Ward are only as tall as they are. They just aren't 6'8" or 6'9", and aren't going to grow this season. Cherry is lightning quick and can handle the ball, drive and pass, but he's not yet an outside shooter. AJ is very good, but he hasn't been perfect in every game. I think he will get closer to perfect. I think he will get more aggressive and start to take over games earlier and certainly in the second half. Staudacher is a shooter, not a driver. These things are just a fact of life. However, all of these guys are very good at other things. My view is that it will take improved, more aggressive, and more consistent from all players, especially AJ, to get the team the need road wins, and to hold serve on home court.
PR, thanks for the reply, after the 1st paragraph :thumb: It is nice to hear your somewhat critical side, and letting us see a little different side of your opinions. I knew somewhere you had that in you.
You and I both have said and agree coaches cannot put the ball in the basket for their players, and that will never change. However, when you see a consistent struggle in any one aspect of any sport, that is a sign something is not being done right to strengthen any weakness. Do not get me wrong, I think highly of Tinkle personally and professionally. I am proud that he is our coach and represents everything good personally and professionally in NCAA athletics. However, in his time here there are a few things that have become patterns with his teams that are concerns to our basketball fan base. Those few things are team rebounding, offensive consistency/perimeter shooting/penetrating, element of surprise or diversity in offense and defensive strategy (they are predictable on both ends), and sticktoitness (stolen from LK, and a word that is so fitting). Over time in my posts I have offered solutions to all these things ranging from different strategies, to creativity, etc.
So let me touch on those things.
(1) Rebounding- (a) get 2 true 6'8" plus bangers and surround them with good scorers. (b) Have an offense designed to get the likes of a Selvig or Hasquet(I know he is gone) to help with rebounding, instead of them be useless in rebounding by hanging on the perimeter way too often. I do not mind bigs hanging on the perimeter when rebounding is not a problem, but with the GRIZ it is and has been problem.
(2) Offense consistency, shooting, penetrating-
(a) Get a shooting expert to work with these kids one on one, offseason or regular season. Hell the former Whitworth coach (cannot remember his name) is one hell of a shooting coach. I learned more from him in 1 day of training than I have from most coaches combined. Speaking of shooting coaches, John Morrison (Adams Dad) last I knew was in Spokane, and actually is a shooting instructor, since giving up coaching. He may be a little tempormental, and even Bob Knight like at times, nonetheless he knows shooting and is hard assed to get players/pupils to do well. I met John Morrison in an open gym in Glendive, MT, I played well against his JC players. He took me aside,told me I have game, but the shooting form needs work. He spent a little time with me over a few months, just breaking down the fundamentals and starting over. Shortly thereafter, I became a good shooter, too bad I did not have the quicks or ballhandling talent. Over the years, I have taught many of his principles to a few AAU players, my own amatuer teams, and they got better too. I watched Strait struggle at the FT line, and all it took was him learning to balance his weight longer on his toes. I watch Cherry, I see solid ball rotation and good footwork, yet also see he needs alot of upper body work to be a good shooter. I see Staudacher have one of the most picture perfect shots ever, yet since his injury he fades to either direction from time to time, he used to never fade one way or the other. McGillis needs to release higher for better trajectory more consistently. Young needs repetition and better offensive awareness, and better rotation on his shot, like it is a matter of a slight hand or finger adjustment, or maybe as simple as feel for the ball. Whatever it is with him, it is very slight.
(b) Out of the ordinary strategy: Such as posting up guards or SF's(see how EWU used Stuckey and how teams took advantage of Ellis a few years back) on quicker smaller players when our bigs are not being effective or taken out of the game offensively. Clear out the lane to utilize one on one matchups (Huse's strategy). I have seen us rarely post up our guards and SF's, but very seldom. I really am hard pressed to think of any clear out plays that were not in the closing seconds. Clear out plays and opening the lane up also go hand in hand with penetration.
(3) Element of surprise/diversity, I already touched on offense. Defensively, where are the traps and press defense at opportune times? LK was a genius when to call these and for how long to use them. With the likes of Will Cherry, AJ, Young we have athletic enough and quick enough players in the backcourt to pull these things off occastionally and even for minutes at a time. In addition we have Qvale and Selvig to protect the lane if we should get burned. Is that not what a good big man is for? Yet we very seldom run those things even with the right personnel. This leading to teams being able to easier prepare for the GRIZ.
(4) Sticktoitness- Tinkle is 100% right every post game in his team analysis, and pregame preview of our opponents. I very seldom disagree with him, meaning they do damn well scouting a team. Once again, he is right, we have to get the ball inside and go inside out offensively. This has to be frustrating for him, because they are SO RIGHT, yet when that is being defensed well our players give up on continuing to try beating the given defense. He is also right we have to get our shooters open shots, but after 1, maybe 2 screens or failed series in executing they give up on it. Damn it, run Staudacher, Taylor, and Young defenders through screens all game long, eventually that wears on the defenders. Speaking of screens, one poster is right, the screens are not effective as they should be. When they are effective we see our shooters get very good shots.
On the positives, Tinkle's players take good shots and we do not see many forced shots. They usually take good care of the ball. They play lights out defense and work hard. All those are signs of good discipline from the coaches, and player awareness. I just cannot figure out how those things are so easily applied in those aspects but are not applied effectively for effecient offense, rebounding, penetration, and sticktoitness?
It is evident to me the coaching and discipline is there. This team is capable of being well rounded in every aspect, but why are they so consistent in some things and so inconsistent at others? I give Tinkle credit, he knows all this. I can tell by his pre and postgame interviews. Why aren't the results on the court being seen in improvement more often by the players? Your guess is as good as mine.