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Coaching Carousel 8 - Teamwork means never taking all the blame yourself
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<blockquote data-quote="CEB" data-source="post: 941012" data-attributes="member: 4905"><p>You make a great point. FAU just wasn't as affected by the physical play as Duke was. I was having similar thoughts with the way this tournament is playing out. Officials are letting a LOT of contact go on the first shot. Whether driving the lane or even the post, there aren't many fouls called. With all of the contact, offensive players cant elevate and these long athletic guys get help side blocks or really affect shots. The offenses having success have guys who can get to the middle and hit that 10-15 footer. With everyone resigned to shooting 3s or attacking the glass, the monsters in the paint can stay around the rim. having a couple guys hitting those mid-range shots pulls the bigs out, not to mention it gives better angles to kick out. Is the mid-range back? </p><p></p><p>All of that said, I am also noticing that the teams most affected by this physical play are pretty young (or at least young relative to their competition). When you have a team full of "COVID seniors" playing physical ball against frosh and sophs, you'll see how physically overmatched they are. Duke vs Tenn comes to mind, as does Purdue's back court, which was eaten alive by contact and active hands...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CEB, post: 941012, member: 4905"] You make a great point. FAU just wasn't as affected by the physical play as Duke was. I was having similar thoughts with the way this tournament is playing out. Officials are letting a LOT of contact go on the first shot. Whether driving the lane or even the post, there aren't many fouls called. With all of the contact, offensive players cant elevate and these long athletic guys get help side blocks or really affect shots. The offenses having success have guys who can get to the middle and hit that 10-15 footer. With everyone resigned to shooting 3s or attacking the glass, the monsters in the paint can stay around the rim. having a couple guys hitting those mid-range shots pulls the bigs out, not to mention it gives better angles to kick out. Is the mid-range back? All of that said, I am also noticing that the teams most affected by this physical play are pretty young (or at least young relative to their competition). When you have a team full of "COVID seniors" playing physical ball against frosh and sophs, you'll see how physically overmatched they are. Duke vs Tenn comes to mind, as does Purdue's back court, which was eaten alive by contact and active hands... [/QUOTE]
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Coaching Carousel 8 - Teamwork means never taking all the blame yourself
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