"Gotta Tighten Some Things Up"



  • @ParisHawk Good question.

    ESPN recap, discussing stars for KU, started with Cole: “Aldrich stood out, swatting three shots in the first half and altering more after coming off the bench en route to his eight-point, seven-rebound night. His highlight came after KU missed just its fifth shot of the game, more than 10 minutes into the first half, and he outgrappled Hansbrough for a rebound that resulted in two free throws. That made it 33-10.”

    Watching a Youtube replay of the first half, Aldrich entered the game with 14:34 left in the 1st half when Kaun got his second foul with the score 13-6. The lead got up to 38-12 at 7:30, when Billy Packer p.o.ed the suits by declaring the game over. Got up to 40-12 at 6:38 before UNC started their comeback at 4:40. The half ended at 44-27.

    Before that game, in the 4 prior tourney games, he had a total of 6 fouls, 4 pts, 4 rebs, 1 block, and 0 FTs in 20 total mins.

    For the game against UNC, Aldrich, in 16 mins, had 8 pts (4-4 FTs), 7 rebounds, 1 steal, and 4 blocks with 1 pf. Almost all of that was in the first half. (Hansbrough, in 36 mins, had 17 pts, 9 rebs, 0 blocks, and 2 steals.)

    The praise for Aldrich isn’t that he played so stupendously or that he single-handedly defeated UNC. It is that he came off the bench in a crucial situation as a freshman in the biggest test of his life until then, played the POY of the year evenly, and gave the rest of KU’s players the room to move on offense and take risks on defense by giving KU much-needed rim protection.

    He played like a veteran, helping KU totally dispel the notion of UNC being invulnerable. What other relatively unused bench frosh has done that in a Final Four?



  • @mayjay said:

    The praise for Aldrich isn’t that he played so stupendously or that he single-handedly defeated UNC. It is that he came off the bench in a crucial situation as a freshman in the biggest test of his life until then, played the POY of the year evenly, and gave the rest of KU’s players the room to move on offense and take risks on defense by giving KU much-needed rim protection.

    I vividly remember everything except the situation being critical, which made me somewhat underestimate, not Cole’s contribution, but the importance of it.

    I’ll adjust my memories based on your recap: thanks much !



  • @ParisHawk said:

    I vividly remember everything except the situation being critical, which made me somewhat underestimate, not Cole’s contribution, but the importance of it.

    The thing to remember is that Kaun had saved us in the regional final against Davidson. For us to lose our 7 footer barely a fourth of the way through the first half, most people were sure that Tyler H would run amok.

    I guess the romanticizing (and that original post yesterday from someone hoping Dwight can give us deja vu) come from just the surprise of the contribution when at best we probably expected him to take up some space and get a couple of boards without fouling too much. If we had won in 2003, we would remember Graves the same way. Now, his 16 pts/16 rebs are a footnote to our crappy FT performance vs Syracuse.



  • @mayjay going back to my original point, wouldn’t you be happy if Coleby turns in a Cole performance?



  • @ParisHawk

    For NC to make a comeback it would have been through Tyler Hansborough and Aldrich completely neutralized him in the first half and helped up the lead to 40-12 and it was 44-27. at the half. However, UNC made a comeback in the second half and pulled within 4 points, 54-50, with over 11 minutes left before KU pulled away again with Cole playing several minutes during this time. I don’t believe you can underestimate Cole’s contribution.



  • @chriz Oh, I thought that was clear by my working so long on these narratives! The only downside would be if it were due to injury giving him an opportunity…



  • @chriz said:

    @mayjay going back to my original point, wouldn’t you be happy if Coleby turns in a Cole performance?

    Crap, I meant to reply to @ParisHawk



  • This team can improve in leaps and bounds without even physically practicing.

    What this team needs is a substantial period in the video suite.

    Our guys hustle. We will not improve just telling them to hustle more.

    Our biggest issue on defense is NOT the individual effort on the ball; on ball or on ball screens. Yes, we could use more zing here but that will automatically come when we can start taking some pride in our defense again!

    Our biggest issues on defense are mechanical issues. Mostly… spacing and hedging. I’ve sort of given up hope of ever seeing a Self team understand hedging. But floor spacing is another issue.

    Look at where we screw up most on defense; the trey ball.

    The issue is spacing, mostly with our weak side help. Go back to really any Big 12 game on your DVR and watch again, paying close attention to weak side spacing on d. Our guys make the classic mistake here. When the ball moves to the other side and our guard defenders give weak side help they end up in “no man’s land.” What has happened… they end up in a place on the court where they are of NO assistance whatsoever. They aren’t in the paint enough to really help out there, and they are 15 ft away from their man poised on the trey line so not close enough to properly close out on the trey shot.

    This one fact has bothered me all year with this team.

    There is no way of playing good defense unless it is done as team defense. Every player needs to understand the role of every other player, too.

    This is particularly important when it comes to spacing on defense. Yes… we play a M2M defense. But… in reality this defense is a hybrid of M2M and zone. On ball defense is M2M and every man is responsible for his man, another rule of M2M. But the help defense, the weak side defense, is more like a zone, playing in between offensive players to help guard someone else while remaining responsible for a single man as required in a M2M. This is where it gets tricky… this is where we have taken a truly stud lineup with guarding capabilities and turned them into a very average defending team.

    Our guards are not properly positioned on their weak side help. One big problem is we have over-compensated for our post because we don’t have a true shot blocker and we have depth as an issue in the post.

    But in reality, the only big help our guards give our post player is the appearance of the lane being too busy so teams are less likely to feed the post or drive the lane.

    They either need to play their man on the trey line closer, or the guards on the other side on the ball need to turn up the intensity to make it harder for them to pass cross court. The added pressure makes it tougher for them to throw a rifle pass to the other side for an open trey, and when they do pass they are more likely to throw the ball a bit off-target, throwing the shooter’s rhythm off and making him take longer to finish his shot because the pass to him was off.

    Playing good defense is like choreographing your defense as a dance team.

    This is where you need old game footage in order to better tweak your defense.

    Our defense can be helped immensely just by viewing tape and setting players up with better positioning and making sure to go over how aggressive they need to play.

    This team should have 3-times more steals every game. Our defense has been completely under-performing except in the final couple of minutes.

    If we get our guys spaced properly and knowing their roles on how intense to play and how they need to play it… not only will you see a huge jump in the effectiveness of our defense, you will also notice our guys have turned up the hustle considerably because that extra 2% effort is what makes you a national championship or not. That last 2% is the hardest hustle to obtain because it really needs to happen through emotional inspiration… which comes from seeing the optimism of good execution, all of this drives momentum.

    I’ve never questioned this team’s desire to win. It’s written all over their faces. Frank and his team has but one goal now… bring home the hardware!



  • @chriz said:

    @chriz said:

    @mayjay going back to my original point, wouldn’t you be happy if Coleby turns in a Cole performance?

    Crap, I meant to reply to @ParisHawk

    Yes, definitely.



  • @drgnslayr Great stuff, 'slayr. I haven’t gone back and re-watched many games, but I’ve certainly noticed on various occasions - and noted them during game threads - that our weak side guards are caught in “no-man’s land” - esp. an issue for Svi. Apart from watching our own tape, it’s like we’ve not watched tape of the opponents to know their tendencies. Even casual fans, and I expect most on this board are far more than that, know that there are certain guys on the other teams that you simply don’t leave open on the arc, but we seem to routinely do it. The problem is compounded by the fact that the guys getting caught in “no man’s land” not only don’t close out quickly enough when the ball is reversed or there is a skip pass, they also languish there when shot goes up from the strong side, not really providing any help on the boards - and not blocking out their guy if they crash the boards.

    How they do watch some tape - or at least your post gets posted in the locker room!



  • @drgnslayr over helping is something I have been talking about all year. Svi, Devonte and Lagerald always go way too far towards the ball and leave their man. Im telling you, Self must teach this because there is no rhyme or reason to continually give up open threes and not do anything about it. Not only do they give up open shots, the over help creates gaps in the defense that are very susceptible to dribble penetration.

    This is a veteran team. If we haven’t seen anything different by now, we aren’t going to see anything different in the tourney. This is so simple and obvious that the only conclusion one can draw is Self wants them to do that.



  • @DCHawker apparently the team doesn’t know that shots behind the arc are worth more than shots inside the arc. It is frustrating watching the same basic, fundamental error every game.

    It makes me wonder what they talk about in film review.



  • The defensive spacing should be adjustable in a game. If we are playing a team with post dominance and no trey shooting then we need our guys to suck in more on weak side help. If a team is killing us from trey then we should be playing further out to make sure we can close.

    In a game, we should be able to tweak our defense. When a team gets hot we need to be able to adjust and make it harder for them and force them into different patterns.

    What is “good defense?” 3 words… Disrupting the flow.



  • It’s cool to read opinions on what we should do to win. However, whether I am at the game or watching from home, Come tournament time, I just cheer for them to play their ass off and win. Let’s go Jayhawks!



  • @brooksmd link didn’t work for me, what was the video?



  • @chriz 2008 KU vs UNC from youtube. Complete game.



  • Still can’t figure out how they came to within 4 after our 40-12 lead. Oh well. Can’t complain about the result. Nor Cole’s performance.



  • Article in the Austin paper this morning!!! I had to cut and paste it.

    self1.JPG

    self2.JPG

    self3.JPG

    self4.JPG



  • Bragg needs to watch film of the 2012 championship run and focus on Kevin Young. That’s all we need him to be. Come in off the bench give us some energy and bounce and rebound like his life depends on it.



  • @HawkInMizery

    Young thrived on contact, Bragg shuns contact…just sayin’…



  • @JayHawkFanToo that is a mystery to me. This isn’t his first experience with big boy ball.



  • @HawkChamp

    His body is 6’-10" 225 pounds but his mind still is 6’-8" 190 pounds.



  • @JayHawkFanToo he’s gotta get over that. Make contact get the FT line grab boards. That’s literally all he needs to do and don’t be a defensive liability. He doesn’t have to be great but don’t be a liability.



  • @HawkInMizery

    I am convince that at this time his problem is more mental than anything else. He has the build and skills to be a superior player but his mind is just not in the game and his confidence is low. If I were Coach Self I would get him a session with hypnotist. 😄



  • @JayHawkFanToo as long as it’s not the chick from Get Out lol



  • I just think Carlton needs to be more committed to staying focused the entire time he is on the court.

    I think his biggest issue is focus. One sure sign is his inability to GRAB the ball! So many rebounds are right there in front of him and he can’t grab the ball. The ball is like a greased pig. Players don’t just have bad hands. His hands are fine. His ability to stay in deep focus is the problem.

    We are a very different team from last year. The ball moves quicker and our offensive aggressiveness is shown in more complex ways. Drives coming from all over the place, etc. So Carlton had to raise his level of focus just to stay even on where he was last year.

    It looks like he is slowly catching on to the pace and other factors. Just not sure he can accomplish much in as many as 6 games.

    A huge help to his focus is adrenaline. When he came back from his last suspension, he had a monster game. That was adrenaline talking. The adrenaline not only helped his focus but also helped his motor.

    So… HOW do we get his adrenaline back up to that level for every game moving forward? Figure that one out and we will benefit bigly.


Log in to reply