The offense is different (what the thread is arguing against isn't applicable anymore) making the thread irrelevant. But I see a lot of you will keep bumping it relentlessly to fill the circlejerk quota.
I see all of you are still being selective on what to argue & dispute. While conveniently circumventing my main points. I'll take away any ammunition you can use for your selectively, and go off and choose some triviality to pick at/focus on.
So I'll reset and ask anyone to actually prove me wrong if the offense was the same & didn't change - or regresses back over the course of the year.
To be sure, Miller's style will not allow for many of Lute’s early tourney exits. His teams play hard, tough, smart and do not beat themselves. The Wildcats dominate defensively and on the glass. Their practices focus on fundamentals and tempo among their points of emphasis.
Defensively, Miller essentially runs the "pack-line" whereby his team rarely extends beyond the 3-point line, but limits penetration and rules the boards while forcing opponents to take contested jump shots with good depth and excellent length.
It's the offensive philosophy that could determine whether this team raises a banner in Indy, or even gets there. Will Arizona ever use its athletes on both ends to expose athletic mismatches? Will Miller let all those athletes get out and run? Does the Wildcats' defensive style limit their ceiling?
Miller's offensive style is straight out of the 80s and 90s with classic motion that either isolates the post, uses high-low action or opens the lane so centers can back-screen passers in order to create driving angles, post-ups and mismatches. Arizona is meat and potatoes. Occasionally they'll run a play for an alley-oop or a 3-point shot, but motion offense, man-to-man defense and "we are tougher and better than you" is the name of the game.
In many ways that style is the same one I've questioned with Syracuse over the years. Sure the Cuse is unique with its 2-3 zone, which is undeniably effective but can also be counterproductive as teams can slow the pace against the Orange. Syracuse has better athletes than 75 percent of its competition, yet uses a defense designed for inferior athletes. The same is true in many ways with Arizona.
[b]Arizona should want more possessions, not fewer, as it has far more talent than most of its opponents, yet doesn't shoot the ball that well in the halfcourt. Picking up full court, engaging the offense closer to the midcourt line and installing a traditional secondary-break offense would all be smart uses of the Wildcats' prodigious speed and length. Even if you miss a quick shot, a likely starting lineup including Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, Stanley Johnson or Gabe York, Brandon Ashley and Kaleb Tarczewski would get a whole lot of second shot opportunities anyway. [/b]
Anyone actually want to dispute what
was my main points?
Though I find it ironic that I was hoping for Miller's offense to change & it has. Its completely different.
NYCat wrote:PS: I bet someone will bump this thread ironically during the season
Heh
I'll never understand how almost all of you can hate & criticize Machina for his regulating, when most of you are guilty of recurrent regulating, the irony is not lost.