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Thursday, February 26, 2009
Coaching up your teammates- no matter how difficult a season
There was the 82-81 victory, of course. But when it was over, senior forward Daven Harmeling clambered up the steps at Pauley Pavilion and gave a hearty hug to his first college coach, Tony Bennett's father Dick.
"You should have seen Daven on the bench, just coaching [players] up, encouraging," Tony Bennett said earlier this week. "There's a bigger picture going on here."
Bennett would like to think Harmeling's actions, coming as he completes an exasperating senior season shooting only 18.8 percent in Pac-10 games and mostly confined to the bench, are representative of what the Bennetts have tried to bring to WSU.
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Patience pays off for Notre Dame bench players
Monday, February 23, 2009
Sense of Urgency
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Scola gives team gritty consistency every game
Luis Scola is easy to overlook because he’s surrounded by stars, because he does things that don’t always show up in the box score.
There he was again Tuesday night, throwing in 13 points, grabbing 18 boards and handing out two assists as the Rockets beat Chicago 107-100.
“He was so active,” Rockets coach Rick Adelman said
“He rebounded consistently all night long. He has really had a solid year. You can’t give him enough credit, and it’s all effort.”
In a season when Adelman has been forced to change his lineup and rotation seemingly every other night, Scola has been amazingly consistent, doing the same things, performing with heart, giving the Rockets the ingredient all good teams must have.
“He has been our MVP of the first half,” Shane Battier said. “No ifs, ands or buts about it. He’s just so solid. I’d heard about him before he came here, that he was one of the best power forwards in the world. I’ve seen it.”
Some of the same things that can be said of Scola can be said of Battier. They bring the same effort every night and do things that don’t show up in the box score.
“Luis maybe doesn’t run the fastest or jump the highest,” Battier said. “He’s just a great basketball player. He has grown so much in confidence since his rookie season.”
“He does everything,” McGrady said. “He brings toughness and energy, rebounds and steals. He’s a great defensive player. Winning teams must have players like him.”
“I just try to help where I can,” Scola said. “Sometimes if a teammate sees another teammate running hard it’ll maybe make them play harder. If the way I play helps, that’s great.”
-Houston Chronicle
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Playing Older
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Thoughts from Coach K
Doing the Dirty Work
Going against a shot blocker
Sunday, February 15, 2009
Tyrone Nash seeks consistency for Notre Dame
Article in the Chicago Tribune on Notre Dame sophomore Tyrone Nash. Nash was kicked out of practice last week for not giving his best effort. What resulted afterwards were three spirited practices, a better effort out of Nash, and a 33 point victory over # 7 Louisville to snap Notre Dame's 7 game losing streak:
"My job is not to score," Nash said. "My job is to play defense, work hard and, if I get the opportunity to score, then take that chance and try to score. My job is to rebound, make the right passes and screen, be the glue of the team. Keep things going."
Thus Brey raised a familiar specter: missing the physical presence of Rob Kurz, who has graduated to the NBA. Before practice Friday, Head Coach Mike Brey was set to show his team clips from Louisville in which, as the Irish coach put it, Nash "really crushes people with screens."
"That was a bit of the Kurz presence we need against those bodies," Brey said. "And we have a bunch more coming. If he can do that consistently, that can really help us."
Consistency is at the root of everything for Nash. He has 11 games of 10 or more minutes played and nine of three or fewer. Brey eventually may regret limiting Nash's minutes before the Irish lost seven straight — but then again Brey noted Nash hasn't always had his "engine running at the highest of levels."
Hence getting bounced from practice for having no bounce in his step. At the time, Nash returned to his dorm room to clear his head. Whether it keeps clearing a path for the Irish is the question.
"It helped make me realize you have to cherish every moment in practice because what you do in practice is what you do in the game," Nash said. "I don't hope it happens again, but if it has to happen again for us to play like that, I'll let it happen."
Saturday, February 14, 2009
The Utility Player
"He brings to the table so much," Bohannon said. "He gets those little putbacks. . . . He gets all those garbage points, all those extra rebounds."
Assistant coach Greg Gard:
"He's kind of the utility guy. You can play him at first, he can catch a little bit, he can play in the outfield. So he's kind of done whatever we've needed."
Here is some more from the article:
Passing is obviously one of Krabbenhoft's strengths. But so are free-throw shooting - he is at 84% against the Big Ten and 87.2% for the season - and rebounding, two categories that lead to easy chances.
He also knows how to throw his 220-pound frame around.
What's harder to discern is his movement and how that affects the offense.
"He has a pretty high basketball IQ, so he understands the hard cut may not get yourself open, but draws a lot of attention," Gard said. "Basketball 101 is, a hard cut will usually help get a teammate open."
That appeared to be the case in the first half of the Iowa game when Keaton Nankivil got a wide-open look for his only three of the game, in part because Krabbenhoft drew extra attention with a cut to the basket.
Consider it another example of Krabbenhoft helping the Badgers put the ball in the basket.
"He is definitely better than people give him credit for because he doesn't look for his shot at all," Hughes said. "He's looking for the best interest of the team and if it calls for him to score points, he will do so."
Friday, February 13, 2009
Team Defense
Routine Doesn't Change
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Live Within Your Team
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Zone defense key to ASU's success
Sunday, February 8, 2009
The Maturation of a Point Guard
Article this morning in the Detroit Free Press on the developing leadership of Michigan St. point guard Kalin Lucas, who coach Tom Izzo says could be one of the best he has every had. It is a great article about the coach and the point guard being on the same page. Here is a portion of it:
It was the spring of 2008 when Izzo caught the first glimpse that his young guard might be for real. Michigan State was playing rival Wisconsin in the semifinals of the Big Ten tournament in Indianapolis. The game was tied. Thirty seconds were left. Lucas had the ball.
As he tried to pass, a defender slipped in, swiped it and raced to the other end for a lay-up. MSU lost by two. When the team reached the tunnel as it walked off the court, Lucas began howling:
"It's my fault. It's my fault." He collapsed as he stumbled into the locker room, sobbing.
"I had never seen that from Kalin," Izzo recalled. "Ever."
It was painful. It was enlightening. And he considered it Lucas' first defining moment.
Last week was the second.
MSU was playing Penn State at home. As in the Wisconsin game the year before, the Spartans had blown a big lead. Again, Lucas had the ball at the end. He was on the free-throw line. Twelve seconds were left. MSU trailed by a point.
Lucas missed a free throw to tie it. MSU lost. In the locker room, Lucas broke down, but not in the guttural way he had in Indy. This time he was seething. Partly because he'd missed a crucial shot down the stretch and partly because he hadn't kept a promise to himself he'd made in December, after MSU lost to North Carolina by 30.
The night after that thrashing, he and roommate -- and teammate -- Durrell Summers went to dinner and promised each other they would never be embarrassed again as long as they were at MSU.
Penn State had won by only four, but something didn't feel right about the way it went down. The team lost its way during a 6-minute stretch late in the first half. Championships teams didn't do that. Or if they did, they made plays at the end.
Lucas spent the rest of that day and evening in knots. Finally, about midnight, he pulled out his cell phone and sent a text message to Izzo: "It will never happen again."
Izzo returned his text the next morning: "I want you to trust me."
The coach called it the second defining moment.
After the Carolina loss, the Spartans had ripped off 11 straight wins. Now it was time to respond again. Three days after the Penn State loss, MSU blitzed Minnesota by 29 points. The team did it without Lucas' jump shot.
"I don't have an answer for what happened," he said afterward.
But he didn't need one. A year ago, he might've sulked if he had a poor shooting night. Against Minnesota, however, he shrugged it off, helped shut down the Gophers' starting backcourt -- holding it to 2-for-13 shooting -- and kept feeding Summers, who dropped in threes from all over the court. His roommate scored 21 points on 8-for-10 shooting. And Lucas had helped make it happen.
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Offense shouldn't dictate defense
"Sometimes we let our offense dictate our defense, and we can't do that," said Nowitzki. "When we're not making our shots, that's when we got to be even more solid on the other end and not give up open shots. If we're struggling offensively, we got to find a way to be more solid defensively."
Added Kidd: "If you don't make a shot, it doesn't mean you can't still be productive on the defensive end. It's something we have to address."
Friday, February 6, 2009
Better practice, better Bluejays
Dana Altman has long been an advocate that perfect practice makes perfect. That's one reason the Creighton coach has told anyone who would listen the last couple of months that his basketball team wouldn't overcome its inconsistent ways until it started getting more consistent in practice.
Altman acknowledged after Wednesday's 79-68 win over Drake that he has seen some improvement in his players' approach to daily drills. Several players also said they sense a greater devotion to practice.
"Guys are going a lot harder, guys are showing up earlier and staying late after practice to get it done," guard P'Allen Stinnett said. "The attention to detail, and the focus during practice is a total 180. A lot of times, Coach would have to tell us not to walk from drill to drill."Now, guys are hustling from drill to drill.
Guys are picking each other up, we're talking to each other more in practice and in the locker room. We're just getting along much better. I don't know if that comes along with the winning, but it's definitely much better."
No player understands Altman's expectations better than Dotzler, the senior guard from Bellevue West. He said there's still room for improvement in practice.
"At times, we've done a better job and guys are working hard," Dotzler said. "But Coach wants consistency, and if we're going to make a run at this thing, we still need to be more consistent in practice."
Road Warriors
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Suns need a sense of urgency
Warriors are thinking forward
Certainly no team has suffered more demoralizing last-second losses this season, which has even created an undertone of caution among Oracle Arena's notoriously exuberant fans. And still, the energy of the entire roster -- including currently exiled rookie Anthony Randolph -- remains amazingly robust. Although the Clippers fold their collective tent the minute an opponent builds a sizable lead, the Warriors, with only a few exceptions this season, so far have refused to accept their bottom-dwelling status.
Case in point: Wednesday's 124-112 win over the Phoenix Suns, a triumph far more decisive than the final score. The Warriors led by as many as 25 points, and Phoenix never dropped the lead to less than 10 points after the first quarter. Stephen Jackson celebrated his first career triple-double (30 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists) as the Warriors tied their season highs for 3-pointers (13) and assists (29).
"We've begun to trust each other," Jackson said. "We're gaining confidence in each other."
All this a mere 48 hours after watching a double-digit lead disintegrate into an overtime loss to the San Antonio Spurs, the Warriors' third home collapse in a nine-day span. But if "We Believe" was Golden State's rallying cry two seasons ago, "We Can't Remember" seems to be the current mantra.
"You have to have a short memory," said Kelenna Azubuike, who scored 19 of his 25 points in the first quarter. "We understand as a team there are going to be nights when it's going to be very disappointing. You just have to keep playing."
Don't Forget This Loss
“Our players shouldn’t forget this loss. This is as bad as you can play,” Krzyzewski said. “You can’t say, ‘Oh, that’s OK.’ Not if you’re wearing a Duke uniform.”
“You never forget this loss,” Krzyzewski said. “Going into another game, we can’t hang on to it but you can never forget a game like this one.”
Duke melted against Clemson’s defense, which wobbled them with their full-court pressure in the first half then continued to bother them in the front-court with straight-up man-to-man pressure in the second half.
Kyle Singler had five turnovers. Nolan Smith had four. The total was 16 but it felt like twice that many.
“They know how to turn you over and you have to be strong with the ball,” Duke’s Gerald Henderson said. “You have to make quick decisions and value the ball. We didn’t do any of that.”
Getting out of a shooting slump
The Illini's three best perimeter shooters—McCamey, Trent Meacham and Alex Legion—are in shooting slumps of varying degrees the last five games, which includes road losses to two ranked Big Ten teams, Michigan State and Minnesota.
"There's a little hesitation, a little [lack of ] confidence," coach Bruce Weber said. "It's not cutting, getting to the ball, not being aggressive, that's important."If we can get Trent making some shots, get Alex on a roll here . . . we have to be tough to defend."
"Part of that is the offense, screening angles, cutting harder. The passer has to see open guys and attack more."
In the last five games, McCamey has made just 17 of 49 shots, 7 of 30 on threes. "Demetri really sets the tone," Weber said. "I'm not putting pressure on him, but the quick 'threes' [don't] help our team. If he gets in the paint, has seven assists and no turnovers and gets to the free-throw line, we're a much better team."
McCamey's solid 6 of 10 Jan. 24 in the victory over Wisconsin, in which he also made 11 of 12 free throws and scored 25 points, is part of the streak.
"Wisconsin was an effective game for him," Weber said. "He has a tendency to give in to the easier thing, and that's to put up a quick three."
Even though he starts, Meacham has taken only 24 shots in the last five games, and made only five, 3 of 30 on threes.
"I feel like I haven't hit a shot in a month," Meacham said. "Larry Bird said shooting is 80-90 percent mental. It's all about confidence. You have to forget about the last shot and think the next one is going in."
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
From the coaches at Santa Clara:
If you always have good pressure on the ball then that will allow your teammates extra time to get through screens and recover to their man. You never want a passer to be able to sit back and put a pass exactly where and when he wants it. Even if you get caught in a screen or get back cut, if your teammate is applying good ball pressure, that may be the extra second you need to recover to your man and not allow an open shot.
Monday, February 2, 2009
The evolution of UCONN's new leader
Two years ago, Jeff Adrien would have kept his mouth shut, and Connecticut might have lost the game.
Adrien would have bitten his tongue as Notre Dame made its run. He would have sat idle on the bench and let his Hall of Fame coach do all the talking.
But Jan. 24, after Notre Dame countered Connecticut's first punch of the second half with a 12-4 burst, Adrien piped up during a stoppage with 8:46 remaining.
"He controlled the whole timeout," senior guard A.J. Price said after Connecticut polished off a 69-61 win, snapping Notre Dame's 45-game home win streak, just as Adrien had predicted.
"He said everything we needed to do: no fouls, play good defense, hedge. He was very talkative out there."
Speaking up has been the final step in Adrien's evolution as the undisputed leader of the nation's top-ranked team.