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When does Pastner feel heat
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<blockquote data-quote="lv20gt" data-source="post: 938202" data-attributes="member: 2299"><p>You say this is a clear trend but that doesn't really hold true unless you include the years where we were just bad from start to finish so the bold isn't applicable. It wasn't true in 17 because that team didn't really put it together late. It caught teams off guard early to get big wins, and actually struggled later in the year until the NIT. </p><p></p><p>It was various levels of true for 20,21, and 23 but grouping them together is like trying to pretend any illness that features hair loss as a symptom is the same. This year's early season issues were a direct result of the coaching decisions regarding our offense, both in terms of scheme but also emphasis on who should be the focal point. In 2020 the biggest issue was not having two starters for most of the early season which is a very different dynamic. And in 2021 we didn't have the same extended period of bad play (and the bold isn't true again because we clearly put it together in plenty of time to salvage something) as we did in the other seasons. We had two days of bad play, and then immediately beat Kentucky and Nebraska by double digits and went 3-1 in conference to start with the lone loss being @FSU. We went on a bit of a slide when we hit the hardest stretch of the schedule, but that isn't unexpected. Those three seasons aren't nearly as similar in terms of what happened as "we started slow" would try to indicate.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="lv20gt, post: 938202, member: 2299"] You say this is a clear trend but that doesn't really hold true unless you include the years where we were just bad from start to finish so the bold isn't applicable. It wasn't true in 17 because that team didn't really put it together late. It caught teams off guard early to get big wins, and actually struggled later in the year until the NIT. It was various levels of true for 20,21, and 23 but grouping them together is like trying to pretend any illness that features hair loss as a symptom is the same. This year's early season issues were a direct result of the coaching decisions regarding our offense, both in terms of scheme but also emphasis on who should be the focal point. In 2020 the biggest issue was not having two starters for most of the early season which is a very different dynamic. And in 2021 we didn't have the same extended period of bad play (and the bold isn't true again because we clearly put it together in plenty of time to salvage something) as we did in the other seasons. We had two days of bad play, and then immediately beat Kentucky and Nebraska by double digits and went 3-1 in conference to start with the lone loss being @FSU. We went on a bit of a slide when we hit the hardest stretch of the schedule, but that isn't unexpected. Those three seasons aren't nearly as similar in terms of what happened as "we started slow" would try to indicate. [/QUOTE]
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