I don't think honestly, and you could probably ask someone within the athletic department, they had the time to accumulate such backing. Plus as noted above, spending 40,000 grand on a game like this with maybe a 50/50 chance was a poor choice in the current culture on campus. Good or bad that is what it is.
The end of the game was manipulated by two events as I see it. First was the questionable 4th foul on Breunig and forced his removal for a few minutes. That would have changed any coaches strategy. Nevada was smart to take advantage of it, considering the highly subjective officiating that had gone on. Our offense isn't the same without Breunig on the floor.
Secondly and I think this was a problem as the season wore on, is that our offense gets less free at the end of games and becomes dependent on watching people drive to the basket. We didn't have effective game in and game out wing scoring within an offense, and basically it became the Walter-Martin show way too much at the end of games. By design or not, that offensively stagnant pattern has or might have been a product of having such a dominant low post guy who is great in isolation.
DC seems to have a NBA style philosophy with DT and offensive spread. It does wear on the shot clock and has little movement at times, and I think it doesn't require teams to defend much movement, but rather depend on teams to make logical defensive slides to stop Martin in the low post. If the ball doesn't go through martin and Walter doesn't drive, how else are we going to score? Just a question.
The end of the game was manipulated by two events as I see it. First was the questionable 4th foul on Breunig and forced his removal for a few minutes. That would have changed any coaches strategy. Nevada was smart to take advantage of it, considering the highly subjective officiating that had gone on. Our offense isn't the same without Breunig on the floor.
Secondly and I think this was a problem as the season wore on, is that our offense gets less free at the end of games and becomes dependent on watching people drive to the basket. We didn't have effective game in and game out wing scoring within an offense, and basically it became the Walter-Martin show way too much at the end of games. By design or not, that offensively stagnant pattern has or might have been a product of having such a dominant low post guy who is great in isolation.
DC seems to have a NBA style philosophy with DT and offensive spread. It does wear on the shot clock and has little movement at times, and I think it doesn't require teams to defend much movement, but rather depend on teams to make logical defensive slides to stop Martin in the low post. If the ball doesn't go through martin and Walter doesn't drive, how else are we going to score? Just a question.