Merkin wrote:Last year Brian Jeffries said that Ristic lost his confidence in practice having to guard Zeus every session, which is understandable.
Not sure what his deal is this year. Maybe his summer boxing lessons changed the muscle structure in his arms.
Dont care to look to see if I said it in this thread or another, and I got shredded here when I said Jordin Mayes was a "mental midget," so I will sugar coat this one. It is all mental with Ristic. Last year he went on that roll, and we initially felt it was just because of the inferior competition, but he then he did it against UNLV(?). Then he fell off. His freshman year, he had less playing time, but we saw flashes of greatness and then extended periods of WTF. Look at him on defense. He just looks like he is lost, in a daze, a lot of the time. He is slow to make decisions and looks like a deer caught in headlights. He is not a dumb kid, I'd bet my next paycheck that he is exceptionally bright. But the smartest people can still be the ones who brain fart all the time and crumble under adversity if their head is not in the right place. If the Zeus thing is accurate, it still points to mental makeup.
That is why I am not buying the "he does fine against similarly situated post players but struggles against the short, quicker guys." The short guys should not be posing any problems to him. These guys are giving up height and weight to him. Establish good position and just go right over them. He has NBA-level touch with both hands. Just go right over them. When they start cheating, pump fake, get em in the air, and then go up when they are coming down, or take a dribble and finish. He gets under the bright lights and he doesn't know where he needs to be on defense or offense. He goes into robot post move man, which is fine in a vacuum, but kills him when he is out of that comfort zone. Throw a double at him, it's panic deer in headlights Dusan or robot post move Dusan with no success. It's like he is in this permanent habit of having to put the ball on the floor multiple times before he can do his thing. He doesn't need to do that, he doesn't need more than a dribble or two at most to be deadly and keep post defenders honest as a "change up," but that should be it, a change up and not the norm (and add a few more dribbles) . If its not there, kick it back out, reestablish better position and call for it again immediately. He could fix 90 percent of his offense problems right now by having an awareness of where he needs to be on the floor, working hard to get there, and then fighting to keep that position. Some of this is on his teammates too and a lack of a concerted effort to feed him when he is in the right spot. If that is how things are going to be, there is absolutely no reason he should be on the floor instead of Chance outside of giving Chance a breather.