Grizbeer
Well-known member
There was a short period of time late in the first 1/2 when the Griz pressured.mtgrizrule said:? for anyone that seen the game, Did the GRIZ pressure the Guards at all? If not, that was a huge mistake. I have seen 2 games of ISU on TV and they did not handle pressure well at all, half court or full court. I feel we should have done that with CET, Rundles, and even Graves for a few minutes each half.
Do we ever pressure the ball? I think we should against weaker ballhandling teams. Tonight we were much better defensively with Qvale in there, keep his minutes up there.
The problem was, they used Qvale to pressure the inbounds, and god bless him he really showed energy and enthusiasm, but I sure like it better when he was in the key disrupting shots then running down the court trying to catch up to the play.
Qvale was a great spark to the team tonight, he was fun to watch. The energy Hasquet had, and the first few minutes of the 2nd 1/2 when the fed the ball underneath to Strait was fun to see - the rest of the game was perhaps the most frustrated, and depressing I ever remember at a griz bb game.
Regarding the missed free throws, that is not why the Griz lost the game - yes a few points would have mattered, but then ISU missed a lot more free throws.
in the end what lost this game was poor strategy down the stretch. With a 3 point lead and just under 4 minutes remaining, with a bit of momentum on their side, the Griz start to run out the clock - and hand control and momentum over to ISU. With 32 seconds left, and a 3 second differential on the shot clock, everyone in the place knew that ISU would feed it down low to get the last shot. They owned the Griz down low when Qvale wasn't in the game, and owned the rebounding edge. Of course you have a couple of choices, you could put your big guys in, make them earn the last shot from the outside and have the best chance a t a rebound, you could foul (since ISU was shooting about 50% from the line), and decide you want to have a chance to win instead of hoping not to lose, or you could go with the 3 guard lineup that had had their ass handed to them all game in the paint. Tinkle choose the last option.
I like Tinkle I hope he gets it turned around, because I don't see O'Day firing a coach, especially one with a 3 year contract, so he will be around for a few years, and I would hate to see Montana miss the BSC tournament a couple years in a row, and destroy not only the momentum from the 04-06 years, but possibly the entire program. maybe it is time for Tinkle to call up some of his mentors and ask them for advice on how to turn things around.
For those wondering if they should go to the game on Sunday (or any other game) here is my advice - listen to Tinkle before the game - if Tinkle says they had a great practice, and the team understands what needs to be done, and he is in a positive mood about the game, skip it, they will lay an egg and you will be sorely disappointed. If Tinkle sounds worried then by all means go, because they are going to light it up - I have observed this for 2 years now, and it never seems to fail. IMO that is because the teams takes on the personality of the coach, and when coach is happy with practice, they figure their job is done and there is no intensity, or desire to improve. When coach is upset and worried they try harder. Tinkle needs to expect more from this team (at least more than no room for error), never be satisfied or happy with their performance, and the team will respond.