I 100% agree with the bolded. I hammered before the season that our D can make this team better than our talent level would indicate. I think we still have room to grow, and I'm optimistic that this year's players are more invested in growth than last year's.TucsonClip wrote:A lot of new players, including guys like Williams, Randolph and Akot, who still need to tutoring on where to be, who to pick up, how to not get cross matched in transition. A lot of it is awareness. While we have guys who are athletic, can slide side to side, and stick on their man, this year it has been the issues off the ball that have slowed us down defensively.Longhorned wrote:Thanks TucsonClip, as ever.
I don't get why the transition D is so ineffective. We'd seem to have the right personnel for good transition D. How on earth is the floor so open?
Overall, we have been good. But transition defense is all about communication and awareness. That is definitely a process and something Miller can 100% get these guys to improve on over the course of the season. The issues in previous years was the lack of athletic or lateral ability from our defenders.
You hit the nail on the head about execution. We do well individually, but when things get scrambled, it's more than just effort, it's also heavily about execution. We are still learning how to execute. One thing is that the learning should be a multi-year process for guys like BWill, Lee and Akot. What they learn now, they can put into play in 19-20 too.
Thank you for the game breakdown. They're always fun to read.