i've just been watching the mizzou-uconn game, and am reminded once again of my favorite style of basketball--full court pressure on defense, get-the-ball-out-and-run on offense. this evens up the talent level (no question uconn has better athletes) and means a team is almost never out of a game, since it's a style that can score bunches of points in a hurry. i saw paul westhead take inferior talent at loyala marymount and put that school on the national basketball map. of course, before that, john wooden used full-court pressure defense to win his first national championship with a team whose tallest player was 6'5". not to mention how entertaining it is. loyala marymount was on national tv almost every week that westhead was there, and i've been riveted to this mizzou game like no other i've seen so far in the tournament.
could we play basketball this way at montana?
well, will cherry has been playing this style of ball for four years at mcclymonds, while a.j. and mcgillis have the athleticism. if we're to believe mslacat, we may now be recruiting a quick 5'9" point guard from the jaycee ranks. build such a system around cherry and you'd bring fans back to dahlberg in droves, just the way don read built the football program with a wide-open offense that was even referred to as "grass baksetball." i think you'd also open up a lot more shots for two talented players who have trouble getting their shots in a more controlled offense, staudacher and qvale.
well, mizzou did it, and we have a lot in common with them--a state university with gold in its history as a school color, and a strong journalism school. why not us too?
could we play basketball this way at montana?
well, will cherry has been playing this style of ball for four years at mcclymonds, while a.j. and mcgillis have the athleticism. if we're to believe mslacat, we may now be recruiting a quick 5'9" point guard from the jaycee ranks. build such a system around cherry and you'd bring fans back to dahlberg in droves, just the way don read built the football program with a wide-open offense that was even referred to as "grass baksetball." i think you'd also open up a lot more shots for two talented players who have trouble getting their shots in a more controlled offense, staudacher and qvale.
well, mizzou did it, and we have a lot in common with them--a state university with gold in its history as a school color, and a strong journalism school. why not us too?