And two more away in 2005 and 2003, where the games were much higher scoring. Could just as readily make the argument that we needed to change the offense to help the defense back then.TucsonClip wrote:What does it matter if its not needed? Miller is proving that he can field an elite defense each year with his system and his prowess on the recruiting trail. Why do we need to trap, play aggressive and jump passing lanes to speed up the tempo to score more when Miller's system is working?NYCat wrote:Its not needed, its made for inferior athletes. Great for the regular season, but for the post season? I'm not convinced. The defense will prevent early outings, but will get Wisconsin'd again.TucsonClip wrote: Miller is proving that with elite athletes in his packline system, he can trot out an elite defense every year. Whats wrong with that? The advanced stats and analytic guys are not going to grade out our players very well (See Gordon, Johnson, ect. via Kevin Pelton), but Miller's system works.
Also, if getting Wisconsin'd means holding a team to 54 points in regulation with the Final Four on the line, then sign me up. Kaminsky beat us, but needed one of the best games of his career to do so. Yes, the offense failed but im not willing to sacrifice the best portions of Miller's coaching philosophy so that we can score more points. We were 2 baskets away from 2 Final Fours.
I know this isn't about the exhibition for NY, but just in case it is for others.
Here's how it went down in Palo Alto:
I would be awfully bummed if that team hung 76 points on us and we had to withstand two shots to win it.The Cardinal built a comfortable lead in the first half, which saw them head into the locker room with a 10-point gap over Cal Poly Pomona. The beginning of the second half saw similar success for the home team, which built the lead to 14 points with over 15 minutes remaining in the game. However, it did not prove to be a comfortable night as Cal Poly Pomona made a strong push back. In fact, eight minutes after Stanford had increased the gap to 14 points, Pomona hit a 3-pointer to take a 64-61 lead with 7:11 remaining in the game.
The Cardinal men stayed resilient and managed to score 14 of the game’s last 22 points to close the win out. Cal Poly Pomona had their chances at the end of the game, missing two 3-pointers in the dying seconds before freshman forward Michael Humphrey collected the ball and held on until the buzzer sounded.
On the other hand, 79 points! And a fast start!
As for the 60 points UConn scored to win it all, I think the point in NY's malleable theory is that that's fine if you're guard-oriented, but not if you're not. Because guard-oriented teams win, even if they can only score 60 points.
The 54 points Kentucky scored? Not a factor.