Spaceman Spiff wrote:Honest, non-flame question for those who don't like Miller's game strategy, specifically zone offense.
What zone offense would you prefer us run? If you want to emphasize sets or principles instead of just a system name, that's cool. I'm just trying to unpack the general complaint about our zone offense into the specific things people would actually change to do better.
I see a lot of complaints about zone offense. I'm genuinely interested in what actual strategic changes people believe would benefit us.
I thought we ran, in placement, a pretty good zone offense this year. The inability to score from the block when we went high-low, and our lack of a drive-or-dish guard to exploit drives after rubs or skip/swings got the zone out of shape hurt a lot. We had no ability to drive and score, even a high-low post pass died in the post, our 4 did not consistently hit the elbow/circle shot to make the high-low respected, and when they packed zones, our 700 guards couldn't hit a 3.
You shouldn't settle for the 3, but when a team packs a zone like a tourniquet (much like Xavier did in our S16 game), you have to hit WIDE OPEN THREES. It isn't the only way to beat a zone, unless a zone packs inside the frickin' paint like a 4th grade defense. You have to hit a couple of jumpers to bring the zone out to a normal length where there are gaps to exploit.
I thought, in 2018, we ran some good zone stuff, especially with Dusan at the elbow, but it was still in team's perceived best interest to zone us to slow our pace and deal with our size (I think teams with quick backcourts should have been playing man against us from the jump, pressing our guards out, like Buffalo and Wichita St did...lots of groupthink in coaching, and it just became "yes, the zone is what we should do to them").
But a zone simply slowing your pace doesn't mean it is working. If the zone makes us slow down to find the break point, and we are shooting 48% from the field and 41% from 3, the zone is not "causing us problems", even if we are holding the ball for a while to break it. I hear that all the time watching games with casuals..."man...that zone is just choking us. Look at that!" and then I see us score with 15 on the shot clock with a shot from the elbow, or a drive or a wide open 3 and I think "no...as long as we are scoring, it's just fine."
I think our "zone offense" broke down in prior years when our players got impatient after a couple of misses. It wasn't what we were running. When we would get our minds right, we'd see the drives, and the quick swings and the flash to the elbow, etc. But sometimes we would get a quick shot or someone forcing a drive into the heart of the zone, or a missed 3 and think "crap...ZONE!". This last year, I really think we didn't have the skills needed to beat a zone, most notably you have to at least be some threat to hit the open 3 with some consistency. Not shooting blindly, but if the zone packs, you have to make that shot. And even if the zone loosens, you need someone to be able to drive into the zone and distribute, or the high low to have respect for both slots.
It wasn't the offense we were running this year...it was the lack of ability to do the things needed to break a zone.