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Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Mechanics of the Jump Shot
Monday, March 30, 2009
How can I help my teammates?
Bulls' Kirk Hinrich acknowledges difficulty of being a reserve
"Kirk is a starter in this league," guard Ben Gordon said. "He's handled [coming off the bench] well, and that just shows what kind of pro he is. It says a lot about his character."He's still a very, very good player, regardless of the circumstances. He's not going to complain. He's going to do his job every day."
Hinrich has started just two games this season after starting 96.7 percent of his games in his first five seasons. For the first time this season, Hinrich dropped his guard about the difficulty of accepting a reserve role.
"It's been challenging at times trying to stay with it," he acknowledged. "I've been playing well but in somewhat limited minutes."It's a different mind-set coming off the bench. You try to bring energy and give your team a lift. As a starter, you know you're going to play more minutes, and it's more getting off to a good start in both halves and finishing games strong. But if you play long enough in this league, you probably have to be able to do both."
Hinrich said Rose's ability and humility have helped him accept his role.
"Derrick is a heck of a player," Hinrich said. "It's also been easier to handle because we've been playing so much better. When the team plays together and we execute and play hard, it definitely makes it easier."
Executives, teammates and others around the team acknowledge Hinrich's more assertive leadership this season. That has afforded Del Negro the luxury of knowing Hinrich won't create waves over his new role."
He's a pro," Del Negro said. "It's not about personal accolades. It's about understanding what's best for the team. He works as hard as anybody. I knew he'd be prepared because he always is."
Focus, work ethic sends Michigan State to Final Four
"I went from worrying about things to leaving there saying, 'We're going to win the game.'"
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Communication, discipline, leadership helping the Nuggets
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Work ethic takes Young to higher level
Friday, March 27, 2009
The Evolution of Leo Lyons
Anderson smiles.
Villanova turns up defense on Duke
By this time of the year, the teams that play great defense are still playing. As I posted earlier this week, Villanova is thriving on great team defense as was the case last night in their 77-54 victory over Duke in the Sweet Sixteen:
"That's the best I've seen all year," said Henderson of teams defending him. "Different teams attack it with help side and I do anticipate somebody else coming at me to take away my drive. But they did the best I've seen this year. It was every time. It was tough for me to get my own shot."
"We talked all year how good this team could be, but everybody really did lock in on every possession," Wright said. "We've had a guy get tired and miss an assignment. We've had 12-point leads and relaxed. It's happened to us in a lot of games. We had a lead against Marquette and relaxed. We had a big lead against Louisville and relaxed. I'm trying to get them to understand what will make them a great team."
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Izzo thinks Spartans are 'starting to get it'
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Villanova sends their message early and often
Twenty-six seconds in, Darren Collison drove to the hoop. Scottie Reynolds met him at the door, knocking Collison hard enough to bloody the UCLA guard's lip. Collison walked away with a smile. Reynolds stood his ground.
Three minutes in, Josh Shipp drove to the hoop. Dante Cunningham met him at the door, slamming Shipp to the ground. Shipp walked over to ask the official about the severity of the foul. Cunningham stood his ground.
Four minutes in, Corey Fisher went end line to end line. Nobody stopped him. The Villanova sophomore spun in the lane and directly to the hoop, sending a rainbow layup into the basket.
The score was 9-6, but Villanova's message to UCLA was abundantly clear: You're not on the West Coast anymore.
Maybe Scottie didn't score a lot of points, but that first play, that set the tone for us," Villanova coach Jay Wright said.
Honestly, if I'm out there and a team is that forceful from the jump, not even worrying about fouling, just going out there like it's a free-for-all, I'm like, 'Whoa, whoa,'" Cunningham said. "I think it would be hard to get your bearings back."
For Villanova, which will head to its fourth Sweet 16 in five years, there is more to this victory than just embarrassing UCLA. When Wright arrived eight years ago, he built his program on defense, offering up offensive freedom to his players in exchange for defensive intensity.
He established an Attitude Club, in which players are awarded for hard-nosed plays like taking charges and diving for loose balls. Players will tell you winning Attitude Club at the end of the season means even more than finishing as the team's highest scorer.
But in February, the Wildcats forgot who they were. Villanova still won, but the Cats fell a little too in love with their offense, scoring 94, 102 and 102 points in succession -- and worse, giving up 91, 85 and 84.
So when Wright gathered his team before this game, he challenged them to play "40 minutes of Villanova basketball," coachspeak for an entire game of withering defensive pressure.
"We had gotten away from that," associate head coach Pat Chambers said. "We were scoring all these points but that's not who we are. That's not who we want to be. I think we really recommitted ourselves before this game.
We wanted 40 minutes."
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
The Making of a Leader
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
A coach on the floor
Scheyer's backcourt partner, Sean Wallis, needed to be a leader and hit shots. Scheyer told Malik Valliani he needed to become a good passer.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
It's all about the team with this guy
It has been a tough year personally for Duke point guard Greg Paulus. The senior who was a 3 year starter up until this year has seen his playing team decrease with the rise of quicker guards Nolan Smith and Elliot Williams.
It is rare to see a 3 year starter get to his senior year and be a role player who played only 10 total minutes in the 3 ACC Tournament games. It is even more uncommon to see a player like this remain a great teammate. From the New York Times:
When Duke won the tournament title, no player in the team picture had a bigger smile than Paulus. He had the championship trophy in front of him, a senior’s prerogative.
He does not sit at the end of the bench; he is usually the first player next to the coaches and the first one up to greet a player walking off the floor with a hand slap. He sits on the edge of his seat, absorbed in the game.
“It’s sincere,” said Steve Wojciechowski, a Duke assistant coach and former point guard for the Blue Devils. “Greg is one of the all-time best guys we have had in our program. He’s the guy you trust your kids with, and give the keys to your house, or keys to your car.”
Elliot Williams, the freshman guard, said he goes to Paulus after practice looking for tips and insights. Paulus shares three seasons of lessons.
“Elliot is doing a great job for us; he’s really helped out our team,” Paulus said. “He is so long and athletic, and he can really put ball pressure on. He’s a good athlete, and we need him to keep playing well.”
“I’m thinking about the game for 40 minutes,” he said. “We need everybody to win. It’s been different guys to step up and help us win games. I’m not the exception. I need to be ready.”
If you get to the foul line, you win games
When it comes to fouls in college basketball, not all teams are created equal. And this season’s UConn team has been called for fewer fouls than any other (12.1 a game in the regular season) while getting fouled more than most (20.6).
That foul differential of 8.5 is far larger than any other team’s. It allowed UConn, the top seed in the West Region of the N.C.A.A. tournament, to shoot an average of 14.5 more free throws a game than its opponents.
“Every game we’re coming in, we’ve got 8 points built in the bank on foul shots,” Calhoun said in a phone interview on Sunday. UConn averaged nearly 10 more points a game on free throws, actually. “That’s unusual. But it’s a great advantage.”
Seven of the past eight national champions have had differentials of at least 2.6. (The exception was Kansas last year, at 1.1, which beat Memphis — 2.7 — in overtime.) Only 11 of this year’s tournament teams have differentials that high.
“Ours is, without question, a concerted effort to try to get fouls,” Calhoun said. “For example, if one of our kids tries to take the ball to the rim and avoids the foul by trying to scoop the ball, we would be all over him. We want him to initiate contact. Nine times out of 10, around the basket, if you’re trying to complete a shot, the call’s going to go against the defensive player.”
The more the ball moves, the harder it is for the defense to rotate
Monday, March 16, 2009
Krzyzewski works his magic again
“I think the kids would tell you, too, our whole staff, we've been really energized the whole time, really positive and enjoying it – enjoying it but working hard.”
Tough losses against North Carolina, Boston College, and a 27 point loss by Clemson really tested Coach K and his players.
“That's just who coach is, a competitor,” Duke forward Kyle Singler said. “Even when we were taking losses during conference play, it was all about getting better during the season. We wanted to play as well as we (could), but our main focus was on getting better and being at our best at the end of the season.”
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Glue Guy- Stanley Burrell
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Glue Guy- Travis Walton
EAST LANSING -- With its first Big Ten championship since 2001 already secured, a true sense of urgency wasn't necessary Sunday by Michigan State in its regular-season finale against Purdue:
The Spartans were the top seed in this week's Big Ten tournament even before beating the cold-shooting Boilermakers, 62-51.
Unless they do a complete flop in Indianapolis, they will be no worse than a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament.
But simply going through the motions Sunday wasn't captain Travis Walton's style. Never has been. No matter the circumstances, which is why Walton offered some terse, fire-up-the-troops comments at halftime.
"Trav brought it all (today), and it was the players' commitment at halftime that was bigger than any speech I gave," MSU coach Tom Izzo said. "That was all because of Trav and his speech.
"I always say a player-coach team is a lot better than a coach-coach team. Walton is the only guy I know who cannot score a lot of points and be a difference maker in a game. He was a difference maker in our locker room this time."
For lack of a better description, Walton has become Tom Izzo Jr. during his four years in East Lansing. When he speaks, which is rare in public, he commands complete attention from his teammates. When he plays his patented lockdown defense, the other Spartans pick up their defense.
Walton helped MSU force the Boilermakers into 6-for-32 field-goal shooting in the final 20 minutes for a miserable 18.8-percentage.
"Sometimes, when the coaches are getting on everybody, Trav will say the same thing to us. But it's how he relays it," sophomore guard Durrell Summers said. "That's the sign of a true, legitimate team leader.
"We were sluggish in the first half. That's when Travis said 'enough was enough' at halftime. That's when he reminded us that we're all hungry for more. That we have bigger goals ahead of us."
Walton scored just two points against Purdue. But it's all the little things he did -- three steals, three rebounds and two assists -- that to add to his leadership qualities and defensive skills, that make him a complete package.
It is his dedication to winning, which is a similar trait that made Mateen Cleaves special as a Spartan.
"You need somebody that puts winning above everything, and is tough enough to deal with it," Izzo said. "And you need a coach on the floor. That's all Trav."
At halftime, Walton told his teammates their first-half play was unacceptable.
"I just talked about how they were outscrapping us a little bit," Walton said. "It looked like the same thing down there I wasn't going to have that happen at home, and especially on our senior day," Walton said of MSU's 72-54 loss at Purdue on Feb. 17.
"Nobody wanted this final regular-season win as badly as me. Not even our other three seniors. For us to win the championship by four games was even bigger than three games. To tie the school record for most Big Ten wins (15) was too important to me. But we have more to get done."
Glue Guy- Garrett Temple
To opposing guards, however, Temple is simply a royal pain. With his size, his long, spindly arms, his lateral quickness and his intellect, he has fashioned himself into one of the most lethal perimeter defenders in America. Just ask Duke's J.J. Redick, who scored 11 points on 3-for-18 shooting while being guarded by Temple in the third round of the 2005 NCAA tournament, when Temple was a redshirt freshman starter on the Tigers' Final Four team. Temple has also shut down such big-time scorers as Texas A&M's Acie Law (four points) and Tennessee's Chris Lofton (two). Last week, as the Tigers scored their two most important wins of the season, he forced Florida's Nick Calathes and Kentucky's Jodie Meeks to shoot a combined 2-for-14 from three-point range as the Tigers won both games. No wonder he was named a defensive All-America last season by Collegeinsider.com.
Temple has been a four-year starter at LSU, but for the last three years he has played point guard. This year, new Tigers coach Trent Johnson switched him to small forward so 6-1 sophomore Bo Spencer could play the point, but Temple remains an invaluable floor general. He leads the team (and is ranked fifth in the SEC) in assists with 4.1 per game and he is first in the conference in assist-to-turnover ratio (2-to-1). He is also fourth in the league in steals (1.86), he averages 4.5 rebounds and he's making 84.1 percent from the foul line. That should tell you Temple is capable of scoring more than his current average of 7.2 points a game, but since he plays with two of the highest-scoring players in the SEC in Marcus Thornton and Tasmin Mitchell, Temple knows his job is to get those guys open shots, not take a bunch of his own.
Temple is just as impressive off the court. In 2006, he was named a member of the SEC's academic honor roll, and last May he graduated from LSU with a degree in business administration. He is currently pursuing a graduate degree in business. That has endeared him to LSU's first-year coach, Trent Johnson, who was hired away from Stanford partly to rebuild the program's academic standing. "I'm not the kind of person who pays lip service to academics," Johnson said. The new coach likes smart players, and he is smart enough to recognize a high-quality glue guy when he sees one.
"He has good leadership, and it's real. It's not phony," Johnson said. "He's at peace with who he is. He's a very secure person. When Garrett speaks or asks a question, he knows what he's talking about. That's good leadership."
Monday, March 9, 2009
Glue Guys
'The Butler Way'
So what is 'The Butler Way'? According to Matt Howard, who turned down several major schools such as Purdue, Indiana, and Xavier so he could be a part of Butler's program, it's all about accountability.
"It's just being accountable on every possession," said sophomore forward Matt Howard, voted Horizon League player of the year. "We feel like each guy has a job to do on every play, and you count on teammates to do that job every single time.
"The other thing is playing unselfish. You never let the 'me' get over the 'we.' It's so important, and that's a big part of what we do."
Says coach Brad Stevens:
"You just concentrate on recruiting the right people to represent you, not only on the court but in the classroom also," Stevens said. "There are values we try to adhere to, and you want people who are willing to think and work in terms of those values."
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Establishing the Disposition to Dominate
Friday, March 6, 2009
Defense wins Championships
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Championship caliber teams focus on the little things
As Marbury spoke, he still was breathing hard even though he’d been on a diligent workout regimen all year. But this was, he was realizing, quite different. This was Celtics abuse.
“Oh yeah, but it’s good,” Marbury said, summoning the energy for a brief smile. “It was a hard practice today defensively. Defensively this team is amazing. They work at it. They get after it. That’s what it’s about. That’s why they won the championship.”
For now, the road is not smooth for someone anointed as a star/savior in all his other basketball stops.
“I know I’m going to have hiccups,” Marbury said. “Adjusting to these guys is difficult because they play at a high level. It’s not a level where I’m used to. I haven’t played at this level. I’ve never played at a championship level before, so for me, adjusting my style of play, adjusting how I prepare . . . it’s all the same as far as going in with a mind-set, but doing things the way they do things is (what’s) very important.
Paul Pierce offered a knowing nod.
“Even though it was just one day, I think he got a chance to see how we practice, how we get in here early, get our shots up, how we lift the weights - our preparation,” he said. “I think that’s key. A lot of teams, when you’re not winning, you know, the preparation and doing the little things isn’t there. But when you’re a championship-caliber team, you start looking at all the little things from the time you get in the gym to practice and the things you do after. I think him and Mikki (Moore, who is also newly acquired) are starting to see that.”
"Talent is Overrated"
Good research into why the world class athletes are who they are. The research that is presented indicates they are not born with the world-class skills but they have out-worked everyone else in their given field.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Travis Walton's defense makes difference in Spartans' success
Examining Travis Walton's game-by-game statistics is not the best way to measure his contribution this season. A better way would be to look at the stats of those players the Michigan State senior guard has been assigned to defend.
"We've put him on a variety of different guys from 6 feet to 6-7," coach Tom Izzo said. "But he's got that one intangible that not many people have anymore. He's just got toughness, and that's why we recruited him. We thought there was something missing in our program and we needed a bulldog -- another (Mateen) Cleaves-type guy who would get after it."
"You'll always have your star players, but you also have to have that guy that's gonna play defense, that's going to do all the little dirty things that your star player's not supposed to be doing," Walton said.
Izzo said MSU was lacking the "blue-collar guy" that he liked during the early 2000s, and Walton appeared to be the type to fill that role.
Since Walton's arrival, Izzo has been so impressed by his leadership on and off the court that he made Walton a co-captain as a sophomore. Walton is the third three-year captain in Izzo's tenure.
From the start of his senior season, Walton has been forthcoming about his goals. He frequently has mentioned how much he wants to win the Big Ten's Defensive Player of the Year Award, but is aware that anyone's chances to win individual honors correlates heavily with team success.
Illinois coach Bruce Weber spoke highly of his player, Chester Frazier, as well as Walton during Monday's Big Ten teleconference.
"They're both guys that have accepted their roles," Weber said. "It's not easy in this day and age to say, 'Hey, I'm a defensive stopper.' It's not cool to be a defensive stopper. You want to be a go-to guy, a three-point shooter, a dunker or something like that."
Reigning defensive player of the year, Purdue's Chris Kramer, is in the same mold. Purdue also is 1 1/2 games behind first-place MSU.
"Those three guys -- it's kind of funny that the three leading teams in the league all have one of those kind of guys," Izzo said. "Maybe that's why we're all in the same boat."